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Does anyone know where I can find a quick reference for all commands in gitbash for windows? The help command covers the most important, but I can't find info on basic navigation such as getting the current directory, changing directory etc.

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    I found this link very useful (I come from a DOS\Windows environment) yolinux.com/TUTORIALS/unix_for_dos_users.html Jun 21, 2012 at 17:22
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    Mike Gossland's answer should be the one accepted as it is the most correct one and will display all the commands that are available in a git bash environment. The accepted answer displays unix commands, of which only a small percentage are available with git bash for windows.
    – jun
    Mar 31, 2015 at 7:36

5 Answers 5

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from within the git bash shell type:

>cd /bin
>ls -l

You will then see a long listing of all the unix-like commands available. There are lots of goodies in there.

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    This is the most accurate answer as git bash also includes many executables that might not be installed by default on a linux distribution such as: curl, gpg and a tcl-tk environment.
    – jun
    Mar 31, 2015 at 7:31
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    Shot cut: ls -l /bin or ll /bin.
    – chtenb
    Jan 28, 2016 at 9:01
  • Is there any way to augment the binaries in here with other commonly needed tools such as base64 decoding, vim, etc?
    – NeilG
    Nov 17, 2022 at 4:30
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git-bash uses standard unix commands.

ls for directory listing cd for change directory

more here -> http://ss64.com/bash/ Not all of these will work, but the file based ones mostly do.

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    The git-bash list is a small subset of the unix command list. Aug 9, 2017 at 22:12
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Git command Quick Reference

git [command] -help

Git command Manual Pages

git help [command]
git [command] --help

Autocomplete

git <tab>

Cheat Sheets

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It will help you a lot Basic Git Commands

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  • The question wasn't about Git as much as it was about the basic Unix-style commands that come with MinGW bash.
    – eksortso
    Apr 13, 2018 at 21:53
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You should accept Mike Gossland's answer, but it can be improved a little. Try this in Git Bash:

 ls -1F /bin | grep '\*$' | grep -v '\.dll\*$' | sed 's/\*$\|\.exe//g'

Explanation:

List on 1 line, decorated with trailing * for executables, all files in bin. Keep only those with the trailing *s, but NOT ending with .dll*, then replace all ending asterisks or ".exe" with nothing.

This gives you a clean list of all the GitBash commands.

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