 Oh, sorry, I was sleeping. Get it, it's a joke. Anyway, this video is part of a series on the Linux shell, and be sure to check out the full playlist. If you check out the description of this video, there should be a link to the full playlist. But today I'm gonna quickly show you the sleep command. So I can type the word sleep, and I can press, well, we'll say five, and nothing seems to happen. But what it's actually doing, it was waiting five seconds before continuing. So sleep command is when you wanna put a pause in between certain things. So by default, it's in seconds, but you can also do minutes. So I can say one M, and it will sleep for one minute. I'm gonna press control C. If I haven't gone over that, control C should, in most cases, kill the current command you're running. So that would have slept for one minute. And I could also do dash, or one H, and that would sleep for one hour, or I can say two hours, or four hours, and that should wait for four hours. I can do man's sleep to bring up the manual for sleep, and it's very short, because it's very basic. So right here you can do, it says here you can do seconds, which is the default, so you only need to put the S there. M for minutes, H for hours, you can do days, if you want, and that seems to be the max number there. And that's it, that's how that command works. So this is for when you're writing out a script or a number of commands. Obviously by itself it's not that useful, but you can use it in cooperation with other commands and put pauses in there, and we'll get into that in future tutorials. So I thank you for watching. As always, please visit my Patreon page, patreon.com, forward slash middle X 1000. My website, filmsbychrist.com, that's Chris the K, there should be a link in the description. I hope that you're enjoying this series. If you do, be sure to like, subscribe, comment, and share. And as always, I hope that you have a great day.