Luu Tuyen to linuxmemes@lemmy.world • 3 months agoRemember: GNU/Linux and other UNIX systems can make files that are case-sensitive, Windows can't make files that are case-sensitivelemmy.worldimagemessage-square242fedilinkarrow-up1687arrow-down172
arrow-up1615arrow-down1imageRemember: GNU/Linux and other UNIX systems can make files that are case-sensitive, Windows can't make files that are case-sensitivelemmy.worldLuu Tuyen to linuxmemes@lemmy.world • 3 months agomessage-square242fedilink
minus-square@potentiallynotfelix@lemdro.idlinkfedilinkEnglish0•2 months agoyou mean ntfs and fat are, not windows itself. if windows supported ext4, it wouldn’t have case sensitivity on an ext4 drive
minus-squareKillingTimeItselflinkfedilinkEnglish2•edit-22 months agoi doubt it would let you run .com files, or any of the other various “special” characters though. Though we don’t include whatever bullshit DOS compat might cause problems in either of these.
minus-square@ulternolinkEnglish1•2 months agoIsn’t there an application on Windows that allows you to open ext4? You check it out on that
minus-square@potentiallynotfelix@lemdro.idlinkfedilinkEnglish1•2 months agoyes but it’s not native in windows… then again fat and ntfs isn’t native to linux either.
minus-square@ulternolinkEnglish1•2 months agoYeah, but we don’t know if we can do the case sensitive thingy on that, or do we?
you mean ntfs and fat are, not windows itself. if windows supported ext4, it wouldn’t have case sensitivity on an ext4 drive
i doubt it would let you run .com files, or any of the other various “special” characters though.
Though we don’t include whatever bullshit DOS compat might cause problems in either of these.
Isn’t there an application on Windows that allows you to open ext4? You check it out on that
yes but it’s not native in windows… then again fat and ntfs isn’t native to linux either.
Yeah, but we don’t know if we can do the case sensitive thingy on that, or do we?
I’d assume we can