What's different between Ctrl+Z and Ctrl+C in Unix command line?

I'm using Mac OS X Terminal. And I use Ctrl+Z or Ctrl+C to stop some programs. But I realized that I don't know what they're exactly doing. What are they and what's the difference between them?

Control+Z is used for suspending a process by sending it the signal SIGSTOP, which cannot be intercepted by the program. While Control+C is used to kill a process with the signal SIGINT, and can be intercepted by a program so it can clean its self up before exiting, or not exit at all.

If you suspend a process, this will show up in the shell to tell you it has been suspended:

[1]+  Stopped                 yes

However, if you kill one, you won't see any confirmation other than being dropped back to a shell prompt. When you suspend a process, you can do fancy things with it, too. For instance, running this:

fg

With a program suspended will bring it back to the foreground.

And running the command

bg

With a program suspended will allow it to run in the background (the program's output will still go to the TTY, though).

If you want to kill a suspended program, you don't have to bring it back with fg first, you can simply do the command:

kill %1

If you have multiple suspended commands, running

jobs

will list them, like this:

[1]-  Stopped                 pianobar
[2]+  Stopped                 yes

Using %#, where # is the job number (the one in square brackets from the jobs output) with bgfg, or kill, can be used to do the action on that job.

make a summary:

Ctrl + Z 

 pause a job 暂停任务
Ctrl + C  terminates a job 终止任务
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/bridgestone29-08/p/7354099.html