• Victor@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Thank God they went with file name extensions so we didn’t have to preface every source .txt file with header content to instruct the editor about what kind of content it would have.

        • cron
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          2 months ago

          Because both ways are used. Microsoft relies on file names, linux on the first bytes of the file.

          • Consti@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Not quite correct. For html, that is to signal standard compliance, you can leave it away and the browser will still handle it. For the bash one, all (most) shell scripts use .sh, so you need to give a shebang to tell the loader which executable (sh, bash, zsh, csh, …) to use

            Also on Linux xdg does take file extensions into account, just executables do not

            • cron
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              2 months ago

              You’re right, my comment was oversimplified.

        • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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          2 months ago

          For shell scripts it’s because bash isn’t the only shell; if you leave out the shebang line, Ubuntu will run your script in Dash instead

        • xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 months ago

          For HTML, it’s to distinguish “standards mode” HTML from “quirks mode” HTML (which doesn’t need a header).

        • Kairos@lemmy.today
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          2 months ago

          Nothing unless you want to serve them without some other way to see what file type they are.

          You can run bash scripts with bash.

          Don’t know what a desktop file is.

          HTML has that because webservers used to not have auto media type detection and response headers.