Is there documentation for configuring and using terminal? [closed] - macos

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I just want to use my computer from the terminal. I have read through the Apple Terminal Help documentation, but am looking for more instruction.

i found this 2003 pdf doc. it is pretty comprehensive and still relevant to this day. i suggest setting up a developer account if you are keen to learn more.
As for the things you intend to do on terminal,
man is your great dictionary assistant
cd, ls and pwd are your great buddies in navigating around the files and folders
curl is your great bestie for browsing web pages
.bash_profile is where your configuration lies
Hope this helps!

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Where does Xcode 8 download the developer documentation to? [closed]

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I know that Xcode downloads a lot of developer documentation for everything from Objective-C to Swift on to your mac hard drive if you choose to download the developer documentation.
I've navigated to the directory before, but I didn't note down its location, and now I am having trouble finding it. It had PDF versions of a lot of documentation which is available on the Apple website.
Any idea what the location is ? This question is posted on stackoverflow.com, because the people who will know the answer are programmers who visit this site, as opposed to superuser.
EDIT: Applications/Xcode/Contents/Developer/Documentation/DocSets/com.apple.adc.documentation.docset is not what I am looking for. While it has some documentation, it is not the treasure trove that contains documentation on Objective-C, Swift, Memory management and much much more....that is all stored in some other location... how to find it ?
It is found here:
~/Library/Developer/Shared/Documentation/DocSets/com.apple.adc.documentation.docset/Contents/Resources/Documents/documentation

is the zsh guide on the zsh official website out-dated? [closed]

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I'm trying to find a zsh guide and I notice the guide on the official website hasn't been updated for over a decade. So I'd like to know if there are anything in that guide has been changed and should be skipped when reading, and how many new things has been added during these years. Or are there any more recent guides that I can read instead of the official one?
The official guide probably is outdated.
I would advise you to use the man command. In this case man zsh and the consult the following hyper-links:
Linux Zsh Man Page
The Zsh Wiki

Where can I find documentation on Skype Desktop API? [closed]

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The Skype desktop API was being closed, but they've reversed that decision. I'm now not able to register as a developer (http://developer.skype.com/) as they're 'not accepting new registrations'.
I need to start looking into this as I want to develop a call recording component for Mac (and Windows, but most importantly Mac).
So is there a mirror for the documentation somewhere so that I know how this works? And is there any example code for this?
A comment in this question seems to imply that they provide both tracks of audio readily so I believe that once I can get this info, it should be quite a simple task!
Turns out the Wayback Machine has my answer:
http://web.archive.org/web/20130607130426/http://dev.skype.com/desktop-api-reference
Who would have thought it? ;)

Open source text editor for Mac [closed]

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Does anybody know about any living open source text programming (mainly html/css) editor for Mac? There does not seem to be one.
Kod - dead
Fraise - dead
Smultron - not open source anymore
Coda - not open source
I would like to extend it with CSS live preview tab, but in order to do that it has to be open source, and I would prefer working on a project that has some perspective. Everything seems to be on the Mac App Store now... :\
TextMate 2 is now open-sourced on github.
https://github.com/textmate/textmate#readme
Honestly, learn Vim. It'll take you a while at first, but you won't regret it.

Java library/API to help run windows commands [closed]

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Is there a Java library/API available to interact with Windows OS, like executing commands on the command prompt and returning the output back to the program?
You can use java.lang.Runtime.exec() to do it, but read this first.
Use the ProcessBuilder, which is available starting from Java 1.5!
It has the nice ability to let you redirect the error stream which makes you only have to cope with one InputStream to read from.
Good article here: Runtime.exec() and the API is here: link text

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