Yes, they are. That’s why Foxterm’s natural language parser is conservative. It only triggers on high-confidence patterns. For anything else, it shows you a suggested fox alias. Over time, the model learns your specific lexicon.
Enter .
That is the promise of Foxterm. Not to replace the command line, but to redeem it. To make the terminal not a place of esoteric mystery, but a den of clarity, control, and even a little bit of magic. foxterm
Imagine a computer science student sitting down at a Foxterm terminal. They type help and instead of a man page firehose, they get an interactive tutorial embedded in the prompt. They type fox trail and see a beautiful, timeline-based history of their learning journey. They make a mistake, and Foxterm doesn’t just say command not found —it says, "Did you mean 'find'? Here are three common ways to use it, with examples you can run right now." Yes, they are