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glossary.md

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Glossary

:::{glossary} PATH

: The list of directories in which your system will look for programs to execute. See [PATH]. When you type a command such as ls at the terminal prompt, this will cause your {term}shell to look for an {term}executable file called ls in a list of directories. The list of directories is called the system PATH. Specifically these directories are listed in the value of an {term}environment variable called PATH. Assuming you are using the default Unix bash shell, you can see these directories by typing:

echo $PATH

at the terminal prompt, followed by the return key. This might give you output like this:

/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/X11/bin

The shell will search this list of directories in order for an executable file called ls: first /usr/bin, then /bin, and so on. We can ask to see the full path of the program that the system finds with the which command:

$ which ls
/bin/ls

This tells us that the system did not find a ls executable file in /usr/bin, but did find one in /bin, for a full path of /bin/ls.

shell

: A shell is a program that gives access to the computer operating system. It is usually a "command line interface" program that runs in a terminal, accepting strings that the user types at the keyboard. The shell program interprets the string and executes commands. The most common default shell program is bash {{ -- }} for Bourne-Again SHell, so-called because it is an expanded variant of an older shell program, called the Bourne shell. For example, when you open a default terminal application, such as Terminal.app in OSX or gnome-terminal in Linux, you will usually see a prompt at which you can type. When you type, the program displaying the characters and interpreting them is the shell. When you press return at the end of a line, the shell takes the completed line, and tries to interpret it as a command. See also {term}PATH.

environment variable

: An environment variable is a key, value pair that is stored in computer memory and available to other programs running in the same environment. For example the PATH environment variable, is a key, value pair where the key is PATH and the value is a list of directories, such as /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/local/bin. In particular, the shell uses the value of the PATH environment variable as a list of directories to search for executable programs.

executable

: A file is executable if the file is correctly set up to execute as a program. On Unix systems, an executable file has to have special {term}file permissions that label the file as being suitable for execution.

file permissions

: Computer file-systems can store extra information about files, including file permissions. For example, the file permissions tell the file-system whether a particular user should be able to read the file, or write the file or execute the file as a program.

voxel

: Voxels are volumetric pixels - that is, they are values in a regular grid in three dimensional space - see the Wikipedia voxel entry. :::