Hi, here is no such thing like a Computer book what covers everything. So go for an general purpose UNIX book. Then for an advanced one covering Linux or Debian. Maybe an Admin Guide. Because an Beginners Guide cannot cover every Shell available in detail, you might buy a guide to your favoured shell. For every day problems do the error on Google, cause some hints are volatile. Save money by installing man pages.
So first try to get an overview, then zoom in the topics needed. Go to a book store and to scan through a book. Amazon will not help here. This is an general advice, Holger ps: Same goes for programming languages: First go for language basics (the standard). Then for advanced UNIX-programming or the Windows programming or whatever you do. And don't hesitate to by a book for C++ Templates only -- if required. Here is no way it's being covered at a beginners guide usefully. On Sun, 25 Aug 2024 04:08:27 +1200 Eric Richards <2eric.richa...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello > As the Subject says Any good Debian books highly recommended or Linux > for that matter. > > I found one the other day Debian 12, it only had a one star review > and the buyer wishes he could get his money back > > > > > > *From Eric.* > > > *Sent from Raspberry Pi 5 * > > > *Now we have wasted all our money on Widescreen TV and can not afford > a holiday, a lot of news clips are shown in narrow vision from cell > phones, it looks like the TV news producers have lost their marbl* > *es. * > > *Pedestrian "Cross Now" button is NOT wired to a pedestrian counter, > it works on traffic flow, in fact it can change between school > holidays and school days, * > > > *Sometimes the button does not work, because people like wearing it > out. *
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