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By using whatever tool is associated with that file type. There are dozens of text, graphics, audio, and video editors.
Carla Schroder has written: 'The book of Audacity' -- subject(s): Digital audio editors, Audacity (Computer file) 'Linux Networking Cookbook (Linux)' -- subject(s): Computer networks, Linux 'Curso De Linux/ Linux Cookbook'
There are programs you can download that will read Linux file systems. Common file systems are ext2 and ext3.
There are several ways to read a text file. You can use one of several text editors, including vi, vim, emacs, joe, and nano. You can also parse it through the cat command like this: cat nameoffile.txt | less
Not sure what you are trying to ask here. As the question is written the answer would be something like: By writing the file content to disk in the format specified for that partition. If you are asking which apps will save a file: virtually any app that will read or build file content from scratch, like text editors, word processors, picture or music editors/encoders. What exactly are you trying to do?
A piece of software that when loaded and running allows examination and changing of the contents of a file. There are many types of editors: text editors, photo editors, document editors, HTML editors, etc.
The first file system Linux supported was the MINIX file system.
There is no set file manager in linux. Examples of Linux file managers include but: Nautilus (GNOME) Thunar (XFCE) Dolphin (KDE)
Linux systems have access to a wide range of filesystems, however most Linux distributions default to ext3 or ext4. In the future it is our hope that the "standard" Linux filesystem will be btrfs.Linux supports many different file systems, including ext, ext3, ext4, ReiserFS, Reiser4, JFS, btrfs, and XFS.
You don't "extract" a torrent file, as they contain little data to begin with, and none of it would be useful in another form. Their purpose is to instruct a BitTorrent client on what tracker to connect to to download a file, along with checksum information for the file. For Linux, the most common BitTorrent clients are Transmission, KTorrent, and Vuze.
For the purpose of this question, I'll stick to file systems that Linux natively supports and can boot off of.FAT12FAT16FAT32X-FAT (used on the Xbox)Minixextext2ext3ReiserFSReiser4JFSXFS
The Linux VFS (Virtual File System) may be thought of as a sort of interface between the Linux kernel and the mounted file systems. There can be many different file system types mounted simultaneously and VFS allows the Linux kernel to see and address them all in a similar way. This provides Linux with a great deal of flexibility. [JMH]