2020-02-10
|~1 min read
|153 words
If I can quickly change directories (cd
) to anywhere in my computer’s file system, how can I go back if I mistakenly navigate away from somewhere I was working?
Turns out that Bash (and Zsh) allow a quick return by using $ cd -
.
According to this response on StackOverflow, this works within Bash by calling cd $OLDPWD
.
This means that in Bash you can manually affect the results, however Zsh does not work that way:
$ printenv | grep OLD
OLDPWD=/Users/stephen/_coding/personal/onething
$ goHome
$ printenv | grep OLD
OLDPWD=/Users/stephen/_coding/personal/blog
$ cd -
~/_coding/personal/blog
$ printenv | grep OLD
OLDPWD=/Users/stephen
$ export OLDPWD=/Users/stephen/_coding/personal/blog
$ printenv | grep OLD
OLDPWD=/Users/stephen/_coding/personal/blog
$ cd -
~
$ cd -
~/_coding/personal/blog
Oh well, so I can’t overwrite. I can still quickly navigate back to the directory I was in if I mistakenly navigate away, which is really all I wanted in the first place.
Hi there and thanks for reading! My name's Stephen. I live in Chicago with my wife, Kate, and dog, Finn. Want more? See about and get in touch!