
You can’t use a mouse or trackpad in Terminal, but you can navigate using the arrow keys. If you want to re-run a command, tap the up arrow key until you reach it, then press Return. To interrupt a command that’s already running, type Control-C.Ĭommands are always executed in the current location. So, if you don’t specify a location in the command, it will run wherever you last moved to or where the last command was run. Use the cdcommand, followed by a directory path, like in Step 1 above, to specify the folder where you want a command to run. This time, we’ll create a new folder inside your Documents directory and call it "TerminalTest." There is another way to specify a location: go to the Finder, navigate to the file or folder you want and drag it onto the Terminal window, with the cursor at the point where you typed the path. Open a Finder window and navigate to your Documents folder.

Type cd and drag the Documents folder onto the Terminal window. Go back to the Finder, open Text Edit and create a new file called "TerminalTestFile.rtf." Now save it to the TerminalTest folder in your Documents folder. In the Terminal window, type cd ~/Documents/TerminalTest then Return. Now type lsand you should see "TerminalTestFile" listed. Mv TerminalTestFile TerminalTestFile2.rtf To change the name of the file, type this, pressing Return after every step: That will change the name of the file to "TerminalTestFile2". You can, of course, use any name you like.
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