-5

Before we start this off, is this the right place to be asking questions regarding CLI? If not, let me know where to post and I'll move there. No doubt you lot will down vote this anyway

So I've made a droplet running Ubuntu + LAMP on Digit Ocean and I'm getting to grips with the CLI.

But I'm extremely failing to see the point in using it. Why use a CLI today? 10 years ago, fair enough... but the GUI's of today are just as powerful for generalized tasks, in my opinion. Why use a CLI instead of a GUI? And I'm asking out of generalized needs, not a specific task that would be hard to do in a GUI. Just trying to FTP or view your files is hard enough after typing half of a books worth of characters into the command line.

It feels as if we're going backwards in technology when I have to use a CLI.

22
  • CLI is much more powerful and easier to use. A GUI always lacks features and it's a huge task to keep it up-to-date.
    – juzzlin
    Dec 7, 2015 at 18:52
  • 1
    That was somewhat my point. It's not my close vote but the vote is due to it being opinion-based. The goal here is to answer question objectively not subjectively. So, the way you prevent your question from being closed is by not asking those sorts of questions; or at least ask them a different way. I've seen many good questions get closed because the asker asks for an opinion when they could easily have asked for a "real" answer. Dec 7, 2015 at 18:57
  • 1
    Because a CLI isn't better for everything. You just picked one of the things it's better for, presumably because you are otherwise inexperienced with it. Dec 7, 2015 at 19:03
  • 1
    I have never understood people who think using CLI is too tedious, but still they have energy to write tons of words about CLI. Wtf? I bet this original question have more characters that what's needed to setup a server..
    – juzzlin
    Dec 7, 2015 at 19:09
  • 1
    OK, but you asked for an example of something that can't be done. You may actually do it another way, but nonetheless the fact remains you can't do it directly with the basic OS GUI functionality. I also wouldn't put your window example and the heap size on the same level. Having a too small default heap size incurs performance lag that can't be remedied simply by pressing a GUI button as in re-sizing a window. Dec 7, 2015 at 19:55

1 Answer 1

1

One of the reasons to use CLI is automation and pipe line.

2
  • And there is no way to do that in a GUI based system?
    – ProEvilz
    Dec 7, 2015 at 18:52
  • There is. but vendors for some reason do not do it usually.
    – skalinkin
    Dec 7, 2015 at 19:39

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.