No. The root user's configuration and the systemwide configuration are distinct. /root has the former, and /etc has the latter.
The standard of each application doing things in a slightly different way, and of tolerating a bit of legacy cruft on the side. This is a far cry from the Windows registry hell; even gconf is a far cry from Winders…
But so is South Korea.
No. The root user's configuration and the systemwide configuration are distinct. /root has the former, and /etc has the latter.
The standard of each application doing things in a slightly different way, and of tolerating a bit of legacy cruft on the side. This is a far cry from the Windows registry hell; even gconf is a far cry from Winders…
But so is South Korea.