Yes, but it's not recommended as it will be complicated. To add spaces, you use the backslash followed by a space character.
Readability to the human eye
Yes. Linux is a computer operating system.
Linux is an open system, Unix is not.
The naming conventions required by Windows are unnecessary in Linux. While one can files an "extension", such as ".txt", they are unnecessary for selecting the proper application to open a file (they may still be needed internally by some programs like web servers, but this is not a limitation of Linux itself).
A Linux system administrator can verify that the Linux system is forwaring IPV4 packets by querying the sysctl kernel to see if forwarding is enabled.
The first file system Linux supported was the MINIX file system.
the kernal is the central part of the Linux operating system and determines how the system works - all distributions of Linux are based on this.
1. There is no the Linux operating system.2. Only one component is strictly necessary to make a Linux operating system - the kernel.
Linux System Administrator's Guide was created in 2005.
The Linux kernel.
Neither one is used or necessary in a Linux system.
operating system