Christian Hergert :gnome: on Nostr: npub1uvygz…gr55q npub1xxncn…mjy9a No. Those files are copied into your user ...
npub1uvygz6h4e2npz30ey00vdma8jq3q8nn2x5tudmwcyh6u532cfsls5gr55q (npub1uvy…r55q) npub1xxncn0erh7wj9n0dzkg3c29qyj067n808yjp478yswvd69ame45sumjy9a (npub1xxn…jy9a)
No. Those files are copied into your user folder when your user is created. Most Linux systems, from a clean install, will have something like a `.bash_profile` and `.bashrc` set in your $HOME.
This also introduces drift when you upgrade release to release if for some reason the skeleton files changed. I don't think that happens much though, as you generally just use them to hook in the /etc/profile.d stuff.
No. Those files are copied into your user folder when your user is created. Most Linux systems, from a clean install, will have something like a `.bash_profile` and `.bashrc` set in your $HOME.
This also introduces drift when you upgrade release to release if for some reason the skeleton files changed. I don't think that happens much though, as you generally just use them to hook in the /etc/profile.d stuff.