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The file contents and line commands and install screen-shots are
always in typewriter font, like this:
#!/bin/bash
#############################################
#### This is the great file /bin/Windows ####
#############################################
while [ "1" ]; do
echo "I do my best because I'm the best"
echo "Very soon, next Y2Kill (the 01/01/0000)"
echo "A new marvelous 64 bit release !"
echo "Please wait a little more"
sleep 18446744073709551615 # 2^64-1
done
or this:
$ killall Windows
Terminated
The file content lines should never begin with white space. You'll
have to remove them, if any. Sorry, I'm fed up with C-a
M-AltGr-\ (remember, I'm a French azerty writer). Tab-emacs
reflex is untameable (coders who use Emacs always press the tabular
key like a twitch).
Command input lines begin with a dollar $ (the prompt), you
don't have to type the dollar, just type the rest of the line; other
lines are the command output, you don't have to type them either.
Because all the configuration commands are important, you'll need
to use a system administrator shell, like root, on the
source and the target computers.
$ su
Password: blabla
#
The prompt will be shown as "$ " in the remainder of this
documentation "$ ", even if it should be "# ". This
is because "# " often means comment, so it is ambiguous. I
don't like ambiguity in computer science.
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