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when toggle format what by license comment
Sep 27, 2020 at 2:21 history edited Nathan Mills CC BY-SA 4.0
Add another query
Sep 26, 2020 at 12:13 comment added Braiam @chrylis-cautiouslyoptimistic- if you are using python, go, c, etc. why would you use find/grep?
Sep 26, 2020 at 8:32 comment added chrylis -cautiouslyoptimistic- @Braiam Only as a last desperate resort. Otherwise, I'm quite happy living in Unix-land where everything is a file and I can use find and grep to do my fiddling.
Sep 25, 2020 at 23:19 comment added phuclv some other exceptions: UDF, Reiser4, ISO 9660
Sep 25, 2020 at 22:40 vote accept Nathan Mills
Sep 25, 2020 at 22:09 answer added Jonathan Leffler timeline score: 8
Sep 25, 2020 at 21:32 comment added riQQ Wikipedia has it as procfs, too: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procfs (no hyphen)
Sep 25, 2020 at 16:47 answer added peterh timeline score: -3
Sep 25, 2020 at 16:45 comment added Braiam Personally, I see no point in using proc tags. Most of the time a programmer don't want to read/write from prog but use the ABI/API provided by libc, which would do so.
Sep 24, 2020 at 23:12 comment added Braiam @zcoop98 almost all common filesystem use fs as a suffix, notable exceptions: fat, ext*.
Sep 24, 2020 at 22:23 history edited Nathan Mills CC BY-SA 4.0
List filesystem tags
Sep 24, 2020 at 21:56 history became hot meta post
Sep 24, 2020 at 20:21 comment added zcoop98 Are there any other "filesystem" related tags that have a certain format? (Eg. *-fs vs just fs at the end) If there's a precedent already, we should try to follow it.
Sep 24, 2020 at 3:29 history asked Nathan Mills CC BY-SA 4.0