@katsu :
Also, if you’re already in your home directory, you could just use:
Or, if you wanted to be explicit, you could use a relative path:
In the above example
./
denotes the current directory.
And although my first example doesn’t have a
./
in the path, the
./
is implicit.
So both are pretty much exactly the same thing. They cause cd to enter the Downloads sub-directory of the directory we’re currently in. (If one exists in the current directory - otherwise you’ll quite rightly get an error message!)