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Chmod 202

Owner can write. Group has no permissions. Others can write.

Numeric Notation

202

Symbolic Notation

-w-----w-

Command

chmod 202 file

Permission Breakdown

Detailed view of permissions for each user category

Owner
Read Write Execute
Group
Read Write Execute
Others
Read Write Execute

For Files

chmod 202 filename.txt
Changes permissions of a single file
chmod 202 *.txt
Changes permissions of all .txt files
After applying chmod 202, files will display as:
-w-----w- filename.txt

For Directories

chmod 202 dirname
Changes permissions of a directory
chmod -R 202 dirname
Recursively changes all files and subdirectories
After applying chmod 202, directories will display as:
d-w-----w- dirname

Common Use Cases for Chmod 202

1
General Purpose
This permission set is useful when you need , write access.
2
General Purpose
This permission set is useful when you need , write access.
3
General Purpose
This permission set is useful when you need , write access.

Related Chmod Codes

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Try the Interactive Calculator

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Understanding Chmod 202

The chmod 202 command sets specific file permissions in Linux and Unix systems. This permission configuration owner can write. group has no permissions. others can write.

In the numeric notation 202, each digit represents the permission level for different user categories. The symbolic representation -w-----w- provides a visual way to understand these permissions, where 'r' means read, 'w' means write, 'x' means execute, and '-' means no permission.

When you execute chmod 202 filename, you're modifying the file's access control list to match this specific permission pattern. This is essential for maintaining proper security and access control in multi-user environments.