"cd" with no directory takes you to your home (login) directory. In a path, ~ (tilde) means your home directory, ~usr means the home directory of user usr. For example, "cp ~/foo ~john" copies file foo from your home directory to john's.
The tilde character (~) is a shortcut for the home directory of the currently logged-on user.
It is the Home Directory.
The root directory is usually /.
The root directory is /. The home directory is /home/user.
mv file /path/to/directory
The Linux Filesystem Hierarchy is used to help determine the file structure in the Linux Operating System. It defines the Directory structure and directory contents.
The /, or root directory.
the command 'cd ~' will get you there .
You change the current working path directory in Linux by issuing the cd command, followed by the directory you want to change to. For example:cd /dev/inputwould take me to the that directory.
"/" is the root directory in Linux. Make sure not to confuse this with the "/root" directory, which is the home directory for the user "root" (similar to "Administrator" on Windows)
mkdir directoryname
exit