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RE: [lojban] tar(1) tao
>> On Fri, Nov 23, 2001 at 04:30:20PM -0500, pycyn@aol.com wrote:
>> > In a message dated 11/23/2001 1:26:00 PM Central Standard Time,
>> > b.gohla@gmx.de writes:
>> >
>> >
>> > > The tao that can be tar(1)ed is not the entire Tao.
>> > > The path that can be specified is not the Full Path.
>> > >
>> >
>> > What the fatal fandango is "tar(1)" and how is it related to Tao (in
the
>> > original)? Nuzzling into Linux suggests it is a function deep in all
the
>> > eunuchs but I am not sure that any of that applies here (nor what the
"(1)"
>> > means). Archiving a path doesn't seem to be the same as walking it --
or
>> > describing it, depending. So, that joke failing, what is going on?
>>
>> to 'tar' something is to bundle it in a 'tape-archive'.
>>
>> the specifying of a path probably doesn't have to do with the archiving
above.
>To be more specific, "tar" is the Unix command for making tape
>archives; it collects a set of files and combines them into one file
>that can be later resplit. The (1) is the section of the online
>manual pages, indicating that you can get the manual page for the
>command by typing "man 1 tar" (although in this case, "man tar"
>would work just as well because it's not ambiguous--sometimes a
>user command might have the same name as a library function or
>system call, though, so the number is there to disambiguate).
A. This is not lojbanic.
B. This thread died a while ago.