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'''UNIX''', more commonly spelled '''Unix''', is a family of operating systems that conform to the Single UNIX Specification (SUS) or that present similar behaviour to systems conforming to such a specification. | |||
The design of a Unix systems conforms to a model of modularity, often called the "Unix philosophy", wherein each program is meant to do a specific task, and programs are meant to communicate with each other utilizing "pipes", that pass output from a program as input to another program.<ref>{{Citation|author=Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson|year=1974|title=The UNIX Time-Sharing System|pdf=https://dsf.berkeley.edu/cs262/unix.pdf|publisher=Association for Computing Machinery}}</ref> Such flexibility has made Unix-like operating systems extremely popular among computer scientists. | |||
== References == | |||
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[[Category:Computing]] |
Latest revision as of 23:54, 30 December 2022
UNIX, more commonly spelled Unix, is a family of operating systems that conform to the Single UNIX Specification (SUS) or that present similar behaviour to systems conforming to such a specification.
The design of a Unix systems conforms to a model of modularity, often called the "Unix philosophy", wherein each program is meant to do a specific task, and programs are meant to communicate with each other utilizing "pipes", that pass output from a program as input to another program.[1] Such flexibility has made Unix-like operating systems extremely popular among computer scientists.