ruffsl to ProgrammingEnglish • 11 months agoWhat happens when you open a terminal and enter ‘ls’www.warp.devexternal-linkmessage-square8arrow-up1128arrow-down13cross-posted to: [email protected]commandline[email protected][email protected]
arrow-up1125arrow-down1external-linkWhat happens when you open a terminal and enter ‘ls’www.warp.devruffsl to ProgrammingEnglish • 11 months agomessage-square8cross-posted to: [email protected]commandline[email protected][email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish9•11 months agoInteresting read, thanks for posting. I hadn’t considered how predictive text works in a terminal emulator and its cool to see how that works as well as getting a better understanding of child processes and what commands would/wouldn’t start one
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink4•11 months agoUnix loves to fork processes. So you get lots and lots of processes.
minus-squareParadoxlinkfedilinkEnglish4•11 months agoOnly system I’ve used that loves processes more than Unix is Erlang
Interesting read, thanks for posting. I hadn’t considered how predictive text works in a terminal emulator and its cool to see how that works as well as getting a better understanding of child processes and what commands would/wouldn’t start one
Unix loves to fork processes. So you get lots and lots of processes.
Only system I’ve used that loves processes more than Unix is Erlang