No, I do. Clearing the scrollback because I want a new, very clear start point for a new activity and don’t care about the rest is frequently the goal.
If I do care about the history I’ll do something else or possibly been saving history to disk, although that’s far more rare.
haha, I can relate to that :). formerly I had the compulsion to execute sync frequently. Now my compulsion is to push Ctrl-C like 4 times every time I need it. I read somewhere that’s common because of ^C has a lack of feedback to the user, so, a script showing an alert that the clipboard received some information helped with this compulsion.
clear
. Constantly, and for no reason.Ctrl-L
Oh. I know. But you don’t understand - I’m compelled to type it out. I must.
I used to, but the terminal clear is better, so I don’t.
CMD/CTRL-K for me.
Someone who doesn’t know the benefits of dedicated, unlimited scrollback buffers. This command is useful but has a bad effect (when unintentionally).
No, I do. Clearing the scrollback because I want a new, very clear start point for a new activity and don’t care about the rest is frequently the goal.
If I do care about the history I’ll do something else or possibly been saving history to disk, although that’s far more rare.
I like it so much I alised it to
c
.i’d like to introduce you to your new best friend: reset… it doesn’t everything clear does and a LOT more
haha, I can relate to that :). formerly I had the compulsion to execute sync frequently. Now my compulsion is to push Ctrl-C like 4 times every time I need it. I read somewhere that’s common because of ^C has a lack of feedback to the user, so, a script showing an alert that the clipboard received some information helped with this compulsion.