Generally the default behavior of the 'ls' command will list them in alpha order.
There is no such command. Obviously, in order to enter a command into the prompt, Linux must already be on.
In order to zip a subdirectory in Linux you would use the zip command with the recursive flag to specify that it should add all files under that directory into the zip file. The command would then be zip -r .zip .
The "sort" command.
That would be a semi-contradiction; the command line would need to be already running in order to enter a command. The name of the program that actually provides the command line is called a shell. There are many different shells available for Linux, including Bash, ash, C Shell, fish, ksh, zsh, and scsh.The default command shell is /bin/sh (not /bin/bash, note).
They should already be in alphabetical order, if not than I don't know.
No.
There are several ways to do this (typical Unix ...). you could execute the following command: du | sort -n | tail -6 The 'du' command lists disk usage by listing a file name and size per line, then use the sort command to list numerically, and the last 6 will be the 6 largest.
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To display files and folder ls command is used, which stands for "list directory contents". It has great amount of options and very often used with -la options (list in long format (privileges, creation time, size, if it is symbol link then where it points and etc) and other options tells to include "." and ".." folders).To list all processes there is ps command which stands for "process status". In order to get very detailed list of what is running on your system you could use -lax options with this command.
Try: ls -lS | head -7 The 'head' command uses 7 instead of 6 because the first line is the long listing totals line, and isn't a file.
Order is not an adjective. It's a noun, meaning a command. It's also a verb, meaning to command.
Order, command.