On 18/10/2012, at 11.12, Jim Meyering wrote: > Bendtsen, Jon wrote: > >> On 18/10/2012, at 10.44, Jim Meyering wrote: >> >>> Bendtsen, Jon wrote: >>>> I here by propose that you remove the - in the middle of any >>>> commands. The purpose is to improve the usability because having to >>>> type a - in the middle of a command interrupts my keyboard flow, where >>>> as not typing it does not. >>>> >>>> Further more there is only 1 command that has this issue, and that is >>>> >>>> align-check TYPE N check partition N for TYPE(min|opt) alignment >>> >>> Thanks for the suggestion, but that hyphen makes the command name more >>> readable. Removing it would break scripts using the hyphen, and adding >>> an alias would seem to be unwarranted complication for minimal benefit.
Then call it acheck inside parted, you already have other compounded commands: mklabel mktable mkpart mkpartfs mkfs >>> Besides, how often do you type commands to parted? >>> If you find yourself doing it a lot, I would suggest >>> that you script it, if only to decrease possibility of error. >> >> I type it every time I create a new partition to test that it is properly >> aligned. > > How about creating a shell function? E.g., put this in your > .bashrc (change "acheck" to whatever name you like, and change > "opt" to "min" if you'd prefer the latter) > > acheck() { parted -s $1 align-check opt $2; } > > then you'd type only things like this at the command line: > > acheck /dev/sdd 1 > acheck /dev/sdd 2 > ... > acheck /dev/sda 1 Then I would have to run that after running parted, which is even more interrupted typing because I have to type a / twice. JonB