Date: Thu, 18 Apr 2024 03:03:32 -0400 (EDT) From: anonymous <invalid.nore...@gnu.org> Message-ID: <20240418-070332.sv0.619...@savannah.gnu.org>
| Arguments are given after the program name and are used to modify the | program's operation. E.g.: usage: | | somecommand --help But when I did that, the system said "-bash: somecommand: command not found" ?? | If you need more information about the command you can use: | | man somecommand And when I tried that it said "man: no entry for somecommand in the manual" ?? There's only so much that it is possible to do to help people who know nothing, and who should be starting from some kind of tutorial (a book, paper or online; a class somewhere; ...). There's no end to what would need to be added to explain everything to someone who knows nothing - and even attempting that, even to the extent suggested here, just annoys people who already know they can pipe into more (or less) to paginate output (etc), and just want the basic info ("just what is the option which does whatver?" and get offended by being treated like a novice all the time (and wasting their time, and making everything bigger than needed to do so). kre ps: bash could probably lose the "be a login shell" '-' from argv[0][0] for error messages. It isn't helpful.