Document Convenctions
In this manual, certain words are represented in different
fonts, typefaces, sizes, and weights. This highlighting is
systematic; different words are represented in the same style
to indicate their inclusion in a specific category. The types
of words that are represented this way include the
following:
command
Linux commands (and other operating system commands, when
used) are represented this way. This style should
indicate to you that you can type the word or phrase on
the command line and press Enter to
invoke a command. Sometimes a command contains words that
would be displayed in a different style on their own (such
as file names). In these cases, they are considered to be
part of the command, so the entire phrase is displayed as
a command. For example:
Use the centos-art render
Identity/Images/Themes/TreeFlower/4/Distro/5/Anaconda
--filter="01-welcome" command to produce the first
slide image used by Anaconda in the branch 5 of &TCD;
using the version 4 of TreeFlower artistic motif.
file name
File names, directory names, paths, and RPM package names
are represented this way. This style indicates that a
particular file or directory exists with that name on your
system. Examples:
The init.sh file in Scripts/Bash/Cli/
directory is the initialization script, written in Bash,
used to automate most of tasks in the repository.
The centos-art command uses the
ImageMagick RPM package to convert
images from PNG format to other formats.
key
A key on the keyboard is shown in this style. For
example:
To use Tab completion to list particular
files in a directory, type ls, then a
character, and finally the Tab key. Your
terminal displays the list of files in the working
directory that begin with that character.
keycombination
A combination of keystrokes is represented in this way.
For example:
The CtrlAltBackspace
key combination exits your graphical session and returns
you to the graphical login screen or the console.
computer output
Text in this style indicates text displayed to a shell
prompt such as error messages and responses to commands.
For example, the ls command displays
the contents of a directory using this style:
render_doTranslation.sh render_getDirTemplate.sh render_doBaseActions.sh
render_getConfigOption.sh render_getOptions.sh render_doThemeActions.sh
render_getDirOutput.sh render.sh
The output returned in response to the command (in this
case, the contents of the directory) is shown in this
style.
prompt
A prompt, which is a computer's way of signifying that it
is ready for you to input something, is shown in this
style. Examples:
$
#
[centos@projects centos]$
projects login:
user input
Text that the user types, either on the command line or
into a text box on a GUI screen, is displayed in this
style. In the following example,
text is displayed in this style: To
boot your system into the text based installation program,
you must type in the text command
at the boot: prompt.
replaceable
Text used in examples that is meant to be replaced with
data provided by the user is displayed in this style. In
the following example,
version-number is displayed in
this style: The directory for the kernel source is
/usr/src/kernels/version-number/,
where version-number is the
version and type of kernel installed on this system.
Additionally, we use several different strategies to draw
your attention to certain pieces of information. In order of
urgency, these items are marked as a note, tip, important,
caution, or warning. For example:
Remember that Linux is case sensitive. In other words, a
rose is not a ROSE is not a rOsE.
The directory /usr/share/doc/ contains
additional documentation for packages installed on your
system.
If you modify the DHCP configuration file, the changes
do not take effect until you restart the DHCP daemon.
Do not perform routine tasks as root — use a
regular user account unless you need to use the root account
for system administration tasks.
Be careful to remove only the necessary partitions.
Removing other partitions could result in data loss or a
corrupted system environment.