nicoag328, 11 months ago You could source an aliases.sh file on your .bashrc where you define your aliases, so that they don’t fill up your bashrc. For example, in your bashrc: source ~/.aliases.sh This way you could also create a file with aliases per program.
You could source an aliases.sh file on your .bashrc where you define your aliases, so that they don’t fill up your bashrc.
aliases.sh
For example, in your bashrc:
source ~/.aliases.sh
This way you could also create a file with aliases per program.