Windows, MacOS, and Linux are the most common.
Linux is just an OS (Operating system like macOS, android, Windows...). But the different things are that Linux is a bit hard to learn. Linux is used by hackers (Linux is a "hacking machine", a bit like hacking in movies. And yes u can play games on Linux (There is some games that doesn't support Linux.)
You don't run macOS applications on Linux unless there's a Linux port. As far as Windows goes, there is Wine. Do note that it's not an emulator and it won't run perfectly with everything.
Tata nano
Platform-dependent (Windows, Linux, AIX, MacOs etx), but gcc seems to be a safe bet.
It meant poor white trash fighting for the continued wealth of slave-owners
poor mans cocaine is ritilan or adderall prescribed for people with add commonly abused by high school and college students
If the application is designed to be cross-platform and/or open-source, then it will run on macOS. Otherwise, it would not work.
Levellers
Logical volumes do not have the same restrictions as physical volumes, regardless if it is created in Windows, Linux, MacOS, or any other operating system. The specific details of advantages of a LVM will be documented on their official project site.
Linux is a Unix-like system. This means that it is inspired or influenced by Unix in some shape or form (Linux started off from Minix), but it is not directly derived from Unix. However, BSD is based on Unix, and macOS is indirectly Unix-based because of its mixed heritage with BSD.
You just type the commands in and press Enter - very much like Microsoft's Powershell and Command Prompt, or macOS's Terminal window (which itself runs on Bash)