Which operator will be used with chmod command to assign absolute permission? A. + B. – C. = D. % E. None of the above

+
-
=
% E. None of the above

The correct answer is: A. +

The chmod command is used to change the permissions of a file or directory. The + operator is used to add permissions, while the - operator is used to remove permissions. The = operator is used to set permissions to a specific value. The % operator is used to apply permissions to all files in a directory and its subdirectories.

The following table shows the different permissions that can be assigned to a file or directory:

| Permission | Description |
|—|—|
| r | Read permission |
| w | Write permission |
| x | Execute permission |
| u | User permission |
| g | Group permission |
| o | Other permission |

For example, the following command would give the user read and write permission to the file foo.txt:

chmod u+rw foo.txt

The following command would remove the write permission from the group for the file bar.txt:

chmod g-w bar.txt

The following command would set the execute permission for all users on the directory baz:

chmod a+x baz

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