Meanings of ".1", "#" and "*" in Mac OS library file names [closed] - macos

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Closed 2 years ago.
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I am working with two library files on Mac OS. Here are how they look like when I use ls
libmkl_rt.1.dylib*
libmkl_rt.dylib#
i have three questions on the file names:
What does ".1" mean?
What does "*" mean?
What does "#" mean?

I am not sure what the .1 means, but I believe * means executable, and # means symbolic link, given a thread found on the Unix StackExchange, see: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/96132

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Why does '/opt/local/bin' takes precedence over '/bin' despite `$PATH`? [closed]

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Closed last year.
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Bash that comes with macOS is of version 3.2.57 (the '/bin/bash'), however, I also have Bash version 5.1.12 which lives in '/opt/local/bin'.
I'm interested in why the latter is used when I execute 'bash' despite that '/bin' goes after '/opt/local/bin' in the $PATH variable?
It turns out that the $PATH is read from left to right and the first match takes precedence

How can I see my actual directory in my bash prompt? [closed]

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I installed bash in my Anaconda prompt, and this is what I'm seeing:
bash-4.3$
and I would like to see something like:
zzzz#zzvdhdc/users/xxx/myactualdirectory
use \w for the current directory:
PS1='\w $'
see man bash for more options to change your promt.

Where should I cp oc binary to on MacOS? [closed]

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In this documentation it says
unpack the archive and move the oc binary to a directory on your PATH
I tried echo $PATH and it returns:
bin:/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.4/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/opt/X11/bin
Clearly there are multiple path here, which one should I move cp oc binary to?
/usr/local/bin would be the usual choice for user or third-party executables. That way it won't get wiped out when you update the OS.
See also: Where do you keep your own scripts on OSX? - the question is about scripts rather than binaries, but the same logic applies.

Why is my "ls -A" displaying current and parent directory (even if should not?) [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I'm writing a little bash script.
As written in the reference:
http://linuxcommand.org/man_pages/ls1.html
ls -A
Should not list "./" and "../" directories.
But... on my system (centOS) is still listing it.
Is there some option "always on" I should be take care of before running this script?

How do I connect to remote server in bash? [closed]

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Closed 8 years ago.
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The connection works fine with doing it through the gui as shown in pic 1, but I have tried
mount_smbfs //rajohns:MyPassword#msclst2fs
and I see that the format is supposed to be
//[domain;][user[:password]#]server[/share] path
but I don't know what to put for domain or /share or path
Try
mount_smbfs rajohns:MyPassword#msclst2fs/SHARE2 /Volumes/msclst2fs
to make the volume available at /mnt/msclst2fs. The path is wherever in your file system you want to make the volume accessible.

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