I accidentally ran a wget command without putting quotation marks around the URL, which resulted in a complex output. I'm wondering if there's a script or program that can help simplify what happened and make it more human-readable. Here's the command I used:
`wget https://software.download.prss.microsoft.com/dbazure/Win11_25H2_German_x64.iso?t=dc3ba10e-8c6f-4b62-bd1a-37c8bee4c0e0&P1=1773528006&P2=601&P3=2&P4=LNOzFyium2+MX8GNEy4NTRSzzlhY+Fpl5h+wkgPi1DrpBsKSA/I5/2TeRRUl9mS22TF3XTWUA3tqoqi4Kv4xZEzOeUHwKtyZd59gRweXgL0h1FuL6ashuBrewnsYD0MdHcKZa8v/T0Xp6qvWQlmBqrW+729Gof/hmQo56ya8Nd5+PwPIly4D4GpFgWjKfWdCWry3A11C+WEgcOoo1v6/Q0dSmVuqpgtkVxSg/ocMgErtncSDtNUnHhk7rs8oq5T3duG0rO5s1acQKnxA743wqCy0yFg9klqaZeUGUwayHzGWTEn/Lnf8cuaqv0/4vmWDi7UsFs78bQjbEfIzIJ2a7Q==`
Any advice?
2 Answers
The confusing part is mostly the URL itself. What you're doing is just downloading a file. You could add the `-v` flag to wget for verbose output, which might help clarify things a bit, but keep in mind that the URL needs to be quoted to avoid shell parsing issues. The ampersands can mess with the way the shell processes your command.
You might want to start by checking your shell's history; it might give you some hints on how your command was parsed. It looks like you executed a wget command with arguments in the background without quoting the URL. The command's output is actually pretty straightforward once you break it down. Just be aware that the `&` in the URL is causing the command to be split into multiple parts, which could confuse the shell. But in short, you've initiated a download for that file, even though some arguments are being handled in a way that might seem complicated.

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