The command name identifies the function that will be performed by the program that is called when the command is run. Most command names consist of a combination of a verb (or, action) followed by a noun or phrase that identifies the receiver of the action (or object being acted on): (command = verb + object acted on).
Abbreviated words, usually one to three letters, make up the command name. This reduces the amount of typing that is required to enter the command.
For example, you can create, delete, or display a library; so the verb abbreviations CRT, DLT, and DSP are joined to the abbreviation for library, LIB. The result is three commands that can operate on a library: CRTLIB, DLTLIB, and DSPLIB. In another example, one of the CL commands is the Send Message command. You would use the Send Message (SNDMSG) command to send a message from a user to a message queue.
The conventions for naming the combination verb and object commands are as follows:
Some command names consist of the verb only, such as the Move (MOV) command, or an object only, such as the Data (DATA) command. A few commands have an i5/OS™ command name, and can also be called using one or more alternate names that may be familiar to users of systems other than the i5/OS system. An alternate name is known as an alias, such as the name CD is an alias for the Change Current Directory (CHGCURDIR) command.