ICON
The most usual way is by way of the jar command. The jar command takes a series of inputs, usually a set of class files and folders that represent the binaries (.class, images, audio files, etc) files you wish to combine into a single jar file. The example given by Oracle on the command is as follows: jar cvf TicTacToe.jar TicTacToe.class audio images This takes the TicTacToe.class file, the folder audio, and the folder images, and combines them into the TicTacToe.jar file. The parameters cvf stand for "create", "verbose output", and and "file output"; these are the most common parameters when creating a jar file. For details, see the attached link.
divine command is command given by God
It is given to Combatant Command.
You mean the original code? Impossible. You can, however, disassemble the executable to see the code in Assembly.
Given that ALL computer images are formed from pixels, that would be a yes.
Given that ALL computer images are formed from pixels, that would be a yes.
Sparta was given the command on sea (Eurybiades) and land (Pausanius).
Urinate.
The sweets, spices and/or nuts represent the gifts given to jesus The sweets, spices and/or nuts represent the gifts given to jesus
A command is when a person is told to do something. A computer functions by being given commands. When the mouse clicks the screen, it is giving a command.
Check for the executable permission. ls -l will tell you the precise permissions of a file. On the very end of the permissions string, an executable will have an x there. Linux does not determine things like executability the same way Windows does. While Windows will happily (And blindly.) treat a file as an executable when it has certain file extensions, Linux thinks instead about two things: Whether it has a certain permission to run, and if its "interpreter" is available. Yes, even precompiled binaries run this way. In their case their "interpeter" is merely the loader that passes the program to the kernel for launch. There is a way to run scripts in Linux without the execute permission, and that's by invoking their interpreter directly yourself, such as the command: $ python2 /path/to/python/program.py In this case to Linux you're merely running python with the program you want as an argument. This does NOT work for precompiled binaries, which MUST be given executable permissions to load and run.
Use the 'newgrp' command.