How to find all the available tools in macOS terminal? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Looking for the ultimate IDE for MacHow to migrate my Mac OS X application and data from MacBook Pro to Mac Mini?Automating terminals at startupTerminal bash commands stopped workingpython version 2.7.8 can't run /usr/bin/easy_install. Try the alternative(s):How to access web dev servers running on localhost with non-standard ports from the network?List All Files in USB device from /Volumes Shell ScriptIs there an easy way to list CLI tools installed on macOS?Is it possible to make a folder look and behave like a file?Is there a list of pre-installed command-line tools for macOS?

Why are there no cargo aircraft with "flying wing" design?

What are the motives behind Cersei's orders given to Bronn?

How to recreate this effect in Photoshop?

Models of set theory where not every set can be linearly ordered

Is there a way in Ruby to make just any one out of many keyword arguments required?

Letter Boxed validator

When is phishing education going too far?

How can I make names more distinctive without making them longer?

Did Xerox really develop the first LAN?

What is this single-engine low-wing propeller plane?

Check which numbers satisfy the condition [A*B*C = A! + B! + C!]

How to bypass password on Windows XP account?

How discoverable are IPv6 addresses and AAAA names by potential attackers?

List *all* the tuples!

What do you call a plan that's an alternative plan in case your initial plan fails?

What are the pros and cons of Aerospike nosecones?

Is it true that "carbohydrates are of no use for the basal metabolic need"?

Java 8 stream max() function argument type Comparator vs Comparable

Does polymorph use a PC’s CR or its level?

When -s is used with third person singular. What's its use in this context?

The logistics of corpse disposal

"Seemed to had" is it correct?

Are my PIs rude or am I just being too sensitive?

Right-skewed distribution with mean equals to mode?



How to find all the available tools in macOS terminal?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Looking for the ultimate IDE for MacHow to migrate my Mac OS X application and data from MacBook Pro to Mac Mini?Automating terminals at startupTerminal bash commands stopped workingpython version 2.7.8 can't run /usr/bin/easy_install. Try the alternative(s):How to access web dev servers running on localhost with non-standard ports from the network?List All Files in USB device from /Volumes Shell ScriptIs there an easy way to list CLI tools installed on macOS?Is it possible to make a folder look and behave like a file?Is there a list of pre-installed command-line tools for macOS?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








5















I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
To see if a tool is available I use options like



ruby --version. 


Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command.



Are there commands for listing some or all shell programs?










share|improve this question






























    5















    I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
    To see if a tool is available I use options like



    ruby --version. 


    Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command.



    Are there commands for listing some or all shell programs?










    share|improve this question


























      5












      5








      5








      I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
      To see if a tool is available I use options like



      ruby --version. 


      Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command.



      Are there commands for listing some or all shell programs?










      share|improve this question
















      I am trying to setup a bunch of development projects in my Mac. I have to run various tools like python, ruby, scala, groovy etc.
      To see if a tool is available I use options like



      ruby --version. 


      Instead I would like to see all the list of tools available in Mac terminal via a single command.



      Are there commands for listing some or all shell programs?







      macos terminal iterm






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 28 mins ago









      bmike

      162k46291631




      162k46291631










      asked 4 hours ago









      Spear A1Spear A1

      312




      312




















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
          List all commands that a shell knows
          .



          My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.



          $ compgen -c


          Example



          $ compgen -c | tail
          deepcopy-gen
          kube-controller-manager
          informer-gen
          lister-gen
          etcd
          gen-apidocs
          kube-apiserver
          kubectl
          kubebuilder
          conversion-gen


          Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:



          $ type -a ansible
          ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
          ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible


          This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.



          References



          • 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins





          share|improve this answer
































            3














            The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.






            share|improve this answer






























              1














              You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.



              ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH") 





              share|improve this answer






























                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

                votes








                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                4














                See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
                List all commands that a shell knows
                .



                My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.



                $ compgen -c


                Example



                $ compgen -c | tail
                deepcopy-gen
                kube-controller-manager
                informer-gen
                lister-gen
                etcd
                gen-apidocs
                kube-apiserver
                kubectl
                kubebuilder
                conversion-gen


                Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:



                $ type -a ansible
                ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
                ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible


                This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.



                References



                • 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins





                share|improve this answer





























                  4














                  See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
                  List all commands that a shell knows
                  .



                  My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.



                  $ compgen -c


                  Example



                  $ compgen -c | tail
                  deepcopy-gen
                  kube-controller-manager
                  informer-gen
                  lister-gen
                  etcd
                  gen-apidocs
                  kube-apiserver
                  kubectl
                  kubebuilder
                  conversion-gen


                  Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:



                  $ type -a ansible
                  ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
                  ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible


                  This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.



                  References



                  • 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins





                  share|improve this answer



























                    4












                    4








                    4







                    See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
                    List all commands that a shell knows
                    .



                    My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.



                    $ compgen -c


                    Example



                    $ compgen -c | tail
                    deepcopy-gen
                    kube-controller-manager
                    informer-gen
                    lister-gen
                    etcd
                    gen-apidocs
                    kube-apiserver
                    kubectl
                    kubebuilder
                    conversion-gen


                    Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:



                    $ type -a ansible
                    ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
                    ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible


                    This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.



                    References



                    • 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins





                    share|improve this answer















                    See the answers from this U&L Q&A titled:
                    List all commands that a shell knows
                    .



                    My personal favorite is to utilize compgen since this is part of the family of tools used to build all the tab completion when you're in a terminal and hit tab> + tab twice.



                    $ compgen -c


                    Example



                    $ compgen -c | tail
                    deepcopy-gen
                    kube-controller-manager
                    informer-gen
                    lister-gen
                    etcd
                    gen-apidocs
                    kube-apiserver
                    kubectl
                    kubebuilder
                    conversion-gen


                    Incidentally, if you want to know where one of these executables lives on your HDD use type -a <cmd> to find it:



                    $ type -a ansible
                    ansible is aliased to `ANSIBLE_CONFIG=~/.ansible.cfg ansible'
                    ansible is /usr/local/bin/ansible


                    This shows that the command ansible is an alias and also lives locally on the HDD here: /usr/local/bin/ansible.



                    References



                    • 8.7 Programmable Completion Builtins






                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 1 hour ago

























                    answered 3 hours ago









                    slmslm

                    824614




                    824614























                        3














                        The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.






                        share|improve this answer



























                          3














                          The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            3












                            3








                            3







                            The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.






                            share|improve this answer













                            The easiest is simply to open the Terminal and then press the TAB key twice. You'll be asked if you want to see all possibilities - reply "y" and you'll get the full list.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 4 hours ago









                            jksoegaardjksoegaard

                            20.7k12150




                            20.7k12150





















                                1














                                You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.



                                ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH") 





                                share|improve this answer



























                                  1














                                  You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.



                                  ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH") 





                                  share|improve this answer

























                                    1












                                    1








                                    1







                                    You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.



                                    ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH") 





                                    share|improve this answer













                                    You could take the PATH variable and translate the colons into spaces then list the files in those directories.



                                    ls $(tr ':' ' ' <<<"$PATH") 






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered 3 hours ago









                                    fd0fd0

                                    6,44511431




                                    6,44511431













                                        Popular posts from this blog

                                        Category:Fedor von Bock Media in category "Fedor von Bock"Navigation menuUpload mediaISNI: 0000 0000 5511 3417VIAF ID: 24712551GND ID: 119294796Library of Congress authority ID: n96068363BnF ID: 12534305fSUDOC authorities ID: 034604189Open Library ID: OL338253ANKCR AUT ID: jn19990000869National Library of Israel ID: 000514068National Thesaurus for Author Names ID: 341574317ReasonatorScholiaStatistics

                                        Reverse int within the 32-bit signed integer range: [−2^31, 2^31 − 1]Combining two 32-bit integers into one 64-bit integerDetermine if an int is within rangeLossy packing 32 bit integer to 16 bitComputing the square root of a 64-bit integerKeeping integer addition within boundsSafe multiplication of two 64-bit signed integersLeetcode 10: Regular Expression MatchingSigned integer-to-ascii x86_64 assembler macroReverse the digits of an Integer“Add two numbers given in reverse order from a linked list”

                                        Kiel Indholdsfortegnelse Historie | Transport og færgeforbindelser | Sejlsport og anden sport | Kultur | Kendte personer fra Kiel | Noter | Litteratur | Eksterne henvisninger | Navigationsmenuwww.kiel.de54°19′31″N 10°8′26″Ø / 54.32528°N 10.14056°Ø / 54.32528; 10.14056Oberbürgermeister Dr. Ulf Kämpferwww.statistik-nord.deDen danske Stats StatistikKiels hjemmesiderrrWorldCat312794080n790547494030481-4