• Björn Tantau
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      1007 months ago

      Yeah. It could just as well have issued a file not found error when you try to touch a nonexistent file. And we would be none the wiser about what we’re missing in the world.

      • @4am@lemm.ee
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        187 months ago

        “Do one thing and do it very well” is the UNIX philosophy after all; if you’re 99% likely to just create that missing file after you get a file not found error, why should touch waste your time?

        • stebo
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          207 months ago

          with this logic, any command that moves, copies or opens a file should just create a new file if it doesn’t exist

          and now you’re just creating new files without realising just because of a typo

        • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          97 months ago

          But this directly goes against that philosophy, since now instead of changing timestamps it’s also creating files

          • @kautau@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            You can pass -c to not create a file, but it does go against the philosophy that it creates them by default instead of that being an option

            EDIT: Looking closer into the code, it would appear to maybe be an efficiency thing based on underlying system calls

            Without that check, touch just opens a file for writing, with no other filesystem check, and closes it

            With that check, touch first checks if the file exists, and then if so opens the file for writing