diffhistExt410:53−107MüllerMarcustalkcontribs(→Features: Removed figure containing personal research of questionable quality: if your benchmark shows that checking files gets *faster* with more inodes, then your benchmark is probably shit.)
diffhistFilename extension05:01+2,34637.111.176.237talk(\documentclass{article} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{multirow} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{geometry} \geometry{a4paper, margin=1in} \title{Theories of Covalent Bond and Shapes of Molecules} \author{} \date{} \begin{document} \maketitle \section*{Valence Bond Theory (VBT)} \subsection*{Introduction} Introduced by London and Heitler (1927), explains covalent bonding through atomic orbital overlap. \subsection*{Postulates} \begin{itemize} \item Formed by overlapping of partially f...)Tags: RevertedMobile editMobile web edit
diffhistPOSIX06:32−173Guy Harristalkcontribs(→POSIX-certified: Sequoia for the win, m****f***as! Fix up the Leopard reference, and remove the Apple Open Group page as it only mentions the current release, not the first ever release.)
diffhistPath (computing)23:32−5Guy Harristalkcontribs(A given file system has a root directory, but only the root directory of the root file system is the system root directory; absolute paths are relative to the latter.)
diffhistPath (computing)23:22+5Guy Harristalkcontribs(The path separator is a feature of the *operating system*, not the *file system*. Most UN*Xes, and Windows, support multiple file systems, and a path can start on one file system type and go to another file system type, but the separator is the same; HFS Plus runs on both the classic Mac OS and macOS, but the former uses : and the latter uses / as a pathnameseparator.)
diffhistUnix21:49−91Guy Harristalkcontribs(That's an external link, not a Wikipedia article, so it belongs in the "External links" section - and it's an updated link for an entry that's already there, so replace that entry.)
diffhistFreeBSD15:08+5Comp.archtalkcontribs(Not even 386BSD was first (Net/2 older; only on cheap hardware, and NetBSD older than FreeBSD so maybe just drop from the lead?): "the first fully operational Unix built to run on IBM PC-compatible systems based on the Intel 80386 ("i386") microprocessor, and the first Unix-like system on affordable home-class hardware to be freely distributed. .. BSD's Net/2, distributed in 1991")Tag: 2017 wikitext editor