Explainshell.com rocks! Nevertheless, you lose time to leave the terminal (open browser, copy-paste). But there is a cool solution from ManKier. All what you need is curl.
Usage
# curl request for whoami $ curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=whoami" # curl request for df -h $ curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=df -h"
Simpler usage
With a tiny script it will be more comfortable! Add the following to your .bashrc or .bash_profile (MAC OS X).
# explain.sh begins explain () { if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then while read -p "Command: " cmd; do curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=$cmd" done echo "Bye!" elif [ "$#" -eq 1 ]; then curl -Gs "https://www.mankier.com/api/explain/?cols="$(tput cols) --data-urlencode "q=$1" else echo "Usage" echo "explain interactive mode." echo "explain 'cmd -o | ...' one quoted command to explain it." fi }
Now you can do …
# explain one command $ explain 'df -h' ... df(1) df displays the amount of disk space available on the file system containing each file name argument. If no file name is given, the space available on all currently mounted file systems is shown. Disk space is shown in 1K blocks by default, unless the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, in which case 512-byte blocks are used. If an argument is the absolute file name of a disk device node containing a mounted file system, df shows the space available on that file system rather than on the file system containing the device node. This version of df cannot show the space available on unmounted file systems, because on most kinds of systems doing so requires very nonportable intimate knowledge of file system structures. -h (-H, --HUMAN-READABLE) print sizes in powers of 1024 (e.g., 1023M)
… if you insert only “explain” an interactive mode will started!