What Reference for Unix & Linux actually does (from store listing)
★⋙ Full Offline Content for Unix ⋙ from little drops ★
👍👍👍👍👍
Note : Please give 5 Star, It will encourage us. Please Don't give negative feedback, It is not solution for your need. If you have any problem, please mail @ android@thiyagaraaj.com.
Suggestion are welcome. please mail @ android@thiyagaraaj.com
👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent Navigation and More Offline Contents In Version 6.0 Based On User Response and Expectations
🌷Main Features🌷
✔ Redesign UI based on User Experience
✔ Enhanced Se…
★⋙ Full Offline Content for Unix ⋙ from little drops ★
👍👍👍👍👍
Note : Please give 5 Star, It will encourage us. Please Don't give negative feedback, It is not solution for your need. If you have any problem, please mail @ android@thiyagaraaj.com.
Suggestion are welcome. please mail @ android@thiyagaraaj.com
👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent Navigation and More Offline Contents In Version 6.0 Based On User Response and Expectations
🌷Main Features🌷
✔ Redesign UI based on User Experience
✔ Enhanced Search for Unix Tutorials and Commands
✔ Bookmark Options
✔ Optimized Design Reading Content
✔ More New Chapters for Unix and Linux
✔ Optimized Image for Mobile and Full Offline Content
Commands are under these parts:
Access Control
Communications
Programming Tools
Documentation
Editors
File and Directory Management
File Display and Printing
File Transfer
News/Networks
Process Control
Status Information
Image Processing
Sound
Text Processing
X windows
Web
Miscellaneous
- Commands
- Tutorials
- Unix Administrative and Networking Commands
- About Unix
- VI Editor and Commands
- Unix Shell
- Unix Other Useful Commands
- Unix Advanced Commands
- How Linux Works
- Desktop Linux
- Ubuntu Linux Commands
- Useful Linux Commands
- Linux Advanced Commands
- Linux Network Commands
- Linux Network Configuration Commands
- Solaris System Process Commands
Quick Reference - New
- Unix Quick Reference
- Unix Dummies Reference
- Redhat / Fedora Linux Commands
Comparable Android apps
The five apps in Books & Reference with the closest revenue to Reference for Unix & Linux. Click any to see its detail page.
Each forecast combines App Store rating, ratings count, monetisation model, pricing tier, IAP signals and ad-supported flag.
The base estimate is then multiplied by a per-category scaling factor learned from apps with founder-verified MRR.
Every number on this page comes from public APIs and bumetric's own snapshot history.
Full methodology covers input variables, accuracy bands per category and how we treat apps without comparable anchors.
See also the live data on Reference for Unix & Linux's tracker page for current rating, reviews and snapshot timeline.
Building something similar? Get a free AI audit with $-revenue forecasts for every recommendation.