If anyone is wondering what the list of shortcuts are -
^ is Ctrl
Alt is the alt/option key
Alt+F/B - Forward/Backward Word
^P - Prev command
^N - Next command
^XX - Toggle between beginning of line & current cursor positions
Alt+F/B - Forward/Backward Word
Alt+T/Esc+T - Swap current word with prev
^L - Clear screen
^H/^D - Backspace / Forward Delete Character
^W - Delete/Cut word before cursor
^K - Delete/Cut till End of Line
^U - Delete/Cut Line Before cursor
^Y - Paste last cut
Alt+U/L - UPPER/lower case word after cursor
^- - Undo
^Z - Stop the current process and send it to the background.
> ^XX - Toggle between beginning of line & current cursor positions
This is not true. ^X^X is actually a well known for Emacs users command "exchange-point-and-mark" and it only skips to the beginning of line because that's where the mark is by default. You can set the mark yourself with C-<space> anywhere on the line. From this point on pressing ^X^X will move your cursor to where you activated the mark, and move the mark to where your cursor was. That's pretty useful sometimes.
These two should be equivalent, I think, unless there is something strange going on:
Alt+T - Swap current word with prev
Esc+T Swap last 2 words with prev
C-c abandons current line without saving it in the kill ring and no matter where on the line you are. Faster than C-e C-u or C-a C-k.
M-r (Alt R) works as if you pressed undo (C-/ or C-_) enough times to get back to the empty line.
This should be called 'Readline keyboard shortcuts'. Because they are all handled by Readline and have nothing to do with Bash and are already supported by anything that also links to Readline.
To be fair bash and readline were/are very closely related in terms of codebases. But it's true that almost all command line interactive apps which don't use curses use readline, which makes those keyboard shortcuts worth knowing.
> Whether you’ve just opened Terminal for the first time or you’re a seasoned iTerm user
Seasoned iTerm user? First off, what the heck is an iTerm? Oh, it's an open source Terminal.app replacement first released in 2002. http://iterm.sourceforge.net/history.shtml