avidamoeba ,
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

I'm so annoyed when I tell rm to delete a terabyte of data and it's nowhere near instant. I'd have probably gone insane if I was using Windows.

0x4E4F OP ,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

1TB for Windows... depends on file size, but let's presume you have 1TB of Word documents... just hit Enter and go watch the Matrix trilogy.

RealFknNito ,
@RealFknNito@lemmy.world avatar

I like the windows delete philosophy of asking me before I delete something.

I fucking hate the windows delete philosophy of telling me I don't have access after I said yes.

I'm this close to daily driving as Sadmin

Koof_on_the_Roof ,

One drive has a trash for the trash. I’m still not convinced those files are gone after the 2nd empty, I think they just don’t show the other trash cans

bort ,

the linux-file-deletion is used as a example for good software design. It has a very simple interface with little room for error while doing exactly what the caller intended.

In John Ousterhout's "software design philosophy" a chapter is called "define errors out of existence". In windows "delete" is defined as "the file is gone from the HDD". So it must wait for all processes to release that file. In Linux "unlink" is defined as "the file can't be accessed anymore". So the file is gone from the filesystem immediately and existing file-handles from other processes will life on.

The trade-off here is: "more errors for the caller of delete" vs "more errors due to filehandles to dead files". And as it turns out, the former creates issues for both developers and for users, while the later creates virtually no errors in practice.

lemmyvore ,

doing exactly what the caller intended.

No, no. Exactly what the user told it to do. Not what they intended. There's a difference.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

Machines will always do what you tell them to do, as long as you do what they say.

Sonotsugipaa ,
@Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar
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