What is the Shell?

The shell (or bash or terminal) is a program on your computer whose job is to run other programs, rather than do calculations itself. The shell is a very old program and in a time before the mouse it was the only way to interact with a computer. It is still extremely popular among programmers because it is fast and powerful at automating repetitive tasks.

Here we use the shell for a more modest goal: to navigate the file system, confirm the present working directory, and cement the git to GitHub connection.

Starting the shell

In RStudio, go to Tools > Shell. This should take you to the shell (on Mac: Terminal, on Windows: GitBash or equivalent). It should be a simple blinking cursor, waiting for input and looks similar to this (white text on black background, or black text on white background):

Using the shell

The most basic commands are listed below:

  • pwd (print working directory). Shows the folder (or directory) you are currently operating in. This is not necessarily the same as the R working directory you get from getwd().
  • ls (list all files). Shows all files in the current working directory. This is equivalent to looking at the files in your Finder/Explorer/File Manager. Use ls -a to also list hidden files, such as .Rhistory and .git.
  • cd (change directory). Allows you to navigate through your folders by changing the shell’s working directory. You can navigate like so:
    • go to subfolder foo of current working directory: cd foo
    • go to parent folder of current working directory: cd ..
    • go to home folder: cd ~ or simply cd
    • go to folder using absolute path, works regardless of your current working directory: cd /home/my_username/Desktop. Windows uses a slightly different syntax with the slashes between the folder names reversed, \, e.g. cd C:\Users\MY_USERNAME\Desktop.
      • Tip 1: Dragging and dropping a file or folder into the terminal window will paste the absolute path into the window.
      • Tip 2: Use the tab key to autocomplete unambiguous folder and file names. Hit tab twice to see all ambiguous options.
  • Use arrow-up and arrow-down to repeat previous commands. Or search for previous commands with CTRL+r.
  • git status is the most used git command and informs you of your current branch, any changes or untracked files, and whether you are in sync with your remotes.
  • git remote -v lists all remotes. Very useful for making sure git knows about your remote and that the remote address is correct.
  • git remote add origin GITHUB_URL adds the remote GITHUB_URL with nickname origin.
  • git remote set-url origin GITHUB_URL changes the remote url of origin to GITHUB_URL. This way you can fix typos in the remote url.

A note for Windows users

On Windows, the program that runs the shell is called Command Prompt or cmd.exe. It looks like this:

Unfortunately, the default Windows shell does not support all the commands that other operating systems do. This is where GitBash comes in handy: it installs a light version of a shell that does support all the above commands. When you access the shell through RStudio, RStudio actually tries to open GitBash if it can find it, but it will open the default Windows Command Prompt if GitBash is not found.

If you get an error message such as ``pwd is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file. from any of the previous commands, that means that RStudio could not find GitBash. The most likely cause of this is that you did not install git using the recommended method so try re-installing git.

If you followed the installation instructions and still cannot run GitBash, you should find it under the Start Menu > Git > Git Bash. If you’re still confused, go back and watch the first three minutes of this video tutorial on installing Git for Windows.

Acknowledgments

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