Hi Domingo, The biggest benefit is that it is just plain easier than managing a directory of symbolic links on your own. I am extremely lazy.
Here is an example use case. At the end of a work day, I like to bookmark the folder I am working in on my cluster with to -b work The next day, I can come back in and use to work To get back on track. Note that this process is the same even if the 'work' bookmark already exists, while doing things by hand would throw an error without first removing the old link. Also you would need to remember to use cd -P every time if you wanted to keep things unaliased. Sure you could do it all by hand--in fact, the script essentially does those ln operations you mentioned, plus some additional safety checks--but if you are going to be doing a certain series of operations repeatedly, why not automate them? You are more likely to make a mistake typing things by hand every time. Mara On 2013-04-04 21:05, Domingo Ignacio Galdos wrote: > Hn, I use a similar tool called ln > > In all seriousness what value does or could a tool like this add above ln? > > ln -s ~/some/long/path ~/bookmark > cd ~/bookmark > cd ~/bookmark/nested/tab/completion > rm ~/bookmark > > Sorry I don't mean that in a snarly way I am curious if you can come up or > have with any additional new ideas that go beyond this... I'm not the author, but I have plenty of places I want to bookmark, but have no interest in having a symlink to it cluttering my home folder. For example, git repositories that I frequently access.