Well, in this case, it was a graphical program that was doing it, and I really could’ve recognized that the file was being created by that. I had just kind of forgotten that I opened this graphical program a few days ago on a different workspace…
The regular ls -l doesn’t show the inode on my system, though. I only realized it when I had assigned more permissions to the file and those got reset by deleting the file. The last-modified timestamp also gets updated each time, but I only spotted that afterwards…
If you ask because of the powerline shell prompt, I’m using Starship with the Gruvbox Rainbow preset: starship.rs/presets/#gruvbox-rainbow
You do need a NerdFont for this, as gets mentioned in the Starship installation guide. I’m specifically using the NerdFont variant of Fira Mono here, but you don’t have to use that for this setup.
(I made some light customizations to the preset. If you specifically want those, you can have them, too, but I only set this up two days ago, so I don’t know yet how well it works.)
I have no scientific basis to back this up but this reads like how a large part of the conversation around “Volatile Organic Compounds” or, put more simply, “smelly things” comes across to me.
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