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Unix

Unix is a powerful, multiuser, multitasking operating system originally developed at AT&T Bell Labs in the 1960s. Known for its portability, efficiency, and flexibility, Unix has influenced many other operating systems, including Linux and the various BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution) systems. This topic covers the history, architecture, and key features of Unix, as well as its various derivatives and implementations. It also explores Unix's impact on modern computing, including its role in the development of networking, security, and software development practices.

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A set of Unix shell command line tools for quick and convenient batch processing of tabular text files (a.k.a., tab-delimited, tsv, csv, or flat data file format) with a header line. Provides column reference by name, automatic delimiter and compression detection for per-line transformations, sql-like group-by operation and relational join.

  • Updated May 27, 2015
  • Perl

Created by AT&T Bell Labs

Released 1969

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bsd linux operating-systems posix