To check that the file you're trying to open actually exists, you can change directories in terminal using cd. To change to ~/Desktop/sass/css: cd ~/Desktop/sass/css.
To see what files are in the directory: ls. If you want information about either of those commands, use the man page: man cd or man ls, for example. Google for 'basic unix command line commands' or similar; that will give you numerous examples of moving around, viewing files, etc in the command line. On Mac OS X, you can also use open to open a finder window: open. Will open the current directory in finder.
( open ~/Desktop/sass/css will open the ~/Desktop/sass/css).
The first option in the Terminal is the classic 'find' command that is common to many Unix systems, which will recursively walk a specified folder hierarchy and search items for a given name pattern.
Please don't mix up 'Terminal Commands' with the shell commands or the command line. This is a terminal: Specifically that is a DEC VT-100, possibly the most used type of terminal for UNIX back in the days UNIX was being developed.
There were a large number of different kinds of terminals around until the mid-1980's or so. All these pieces of hardware could do was display characters on the screen, move the cursor around the screen and some other minor functions like clear to end of line, or scroll the display up 1 line. While that device may look like an early PC to you, its not a PC. The only thing this device can do is display characters of text on its screen. And it makes no decisions itself about what characters go on the screen, or where they go on the screen. It has be commanded what to do by a computer, usually a multi-user, Timesharing computer. Despite these limitations, These Terminals are what the users used to do everything on UNIX, programming, running applications, playing games (yes, games), Email, IRC, Chat etc.
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But All the Terminal could do was display characters on its screen, so how could you run an editor in it? You couldn't, and you didn't. The editor ran inside a multi-user, timesharing computer, lets say a PDP-10, which might have had 30 or 40 Terminals connected to it. So there could be 30 or 40 users all sharing the same computer at the same time. They might even have all been editing at the same time. Each user had their own processes.
A User who was editing ran their editing session inside the PDP10, and the editor program inside the PDP10 would send 'Terminal Commands'** to the terminal to show things on the screen of the Terminal. Here are some actual Terminal Commands for a vt100: [ 1 m sending these three characters to a vt100 would put the terminal in BOLD mode. All text displayed after that would appear as bolded text, until another command is sent to the terminal to turn off bold mode.
[; H Put the cursor at position X,Y on the screen. [ 0 K Clear line from current cursor position to end of line [ 1 K Clear line from beginning to current cursor position [ 2 K Clear whole line (cursor position unchanged) [ 3 0 m sending these three characters would cause the terminal to set the background color to black Eventually hardware terminals dwindled completely away. But we still needed a terminal in order to be the input and display device for those thousands and thousands of programs that run on UNIX (and now, Linux of course.) Thats where X-windows Terminal Emulators came into being. These are little graphical programs that emulate what would happen on a real hardware terminal when running a program. They open a window that looks and behaves just like a real terminal (or almost). The Terminal emulators include, X-term, Gnome Terminal, Konsole and others. Remember - None of these are terminals.
They are Terminal emulators. If you send them Terminal Commands, like the ones shown above, you will be directly controlling what the Terminal emulation screen shows. Of course sending escape chars and control chars is a pain, so naturally the UNIX developers made some tools to make things easier. Terminfo, termio, curses, and tput are all special utilities used to make the sending of Terminal commands to your terminal emulators much easier. Most people find tput to be the most useful of these choices. So when you are on the Bash command line, typing in commands, cat, awk, grep etc., please remember that you're not running 'Terminal commands', you're running shell commands, or command line commands.:).