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The lp and lpr commands are the traditional commands used to print jobs on UNIX.
They aren't examples of the same operating system. Unix is a classification of operating system; Solaris is an example of Unix. But Windows 2000 is a version of Windows, and not related at all to the other two.
Names Pipes and unnamed pipes
The base part of the two systems are the same. Solaris is a Unix system from Oracle (Sun Microsystems) AIX is a Unix system from IBM. They also run on different hardware chipsets.
I guess you mean operating system written in C language. Two examples: Unix (and derivatives), MS Windows.
Unix and windows are two separate groups of operating systems. Windows is the operating system of about 90% of personal computers, while unix is the basis of many other operating systems, such as Mac OS X
Ligature in printing refers to the characters that consists of two or more letters that are combined into one. Ligature in printing refers to a system of printing that makes use of the metal blocks of letters to print documents.
UNIX.. Two more OS from MicroSoft - Xenix and MSX-DOS..
# English or traditional units # Metric units (International system or "SI")
Perhaps K&R (same as C).
They cannot use the same computer in the same time, only if it runs a multiuser operating system (unix).
In most Unix and Unix-like systems, there are two kinds of "link". One is a "symbolic (or soft) link", and the other is a "hard link". Both of them are ways of pointing to a file or program that's in some other location in the file system than where it appears to be. (Another way to think of them is as "shortcuts".)A symbolic link can point to any location known to the system, whether it's physically part of the same file system or not. Hard links are generally limited to pointing to files within the same file system.