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📖 Core Concepts Flavour (or flavor) – the sensory perception we experience as taste. Flavour (or flavor) – also the sensory perception we experience as smell. Flavour additive – a substance added to food or drink to create a desired taste or smell. Flavor of Linux – the term used for a specific Linux distribution (e.g., Ubuntu, Fedora). By extension, “flavor” can label any program or code that exists in multiple variant forms at the same time. --- 📌 Must Remember Flavour ≡ taste or smell perception. In food science, “flavour” may refer to an additive that mimics or enhances taste/smell. In computing, a Linux flavor = a distinct distribution with its own package set, default settings, and community. The same word can be used in culinary and technical contexts without implying a relationship. --- 🔄 Key Processes Not enough information in source outline. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Taste vs. Smell Taste: detects sweet, salty, sour, bitter, umami via the tongue. Smell: detects volatile compounds via the olfactory epithelium; contributes most to “flavour” experience. Food‑flavour additive vs. Linux flavor Food‑flavour additive: chemical/ natural ingredient added to edible products. Linux flavor: a software distribution; no edible component, only code and configuration. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Flavour only means taste.” – It also includes smell; the two together create the full flavour perception. Assuming a Linux “flavor” is a food product. – In tech, “flavor” is a variant of software, not an edible item. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition Flavor = Variant Label – Think of “flavour” as a tag that tells you which version of something you’re dealing with, whether it’s a taste profile in food or a distribution in Linux. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Not enough information in source outline. --- 📍 When to Use Which If the context is culinary or sensory science → use the definition “perception of taste or smell” or “food additive”. If the context is computing or software → interpret “flavour” as a specific Linux distribution or code variant. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize “Flavor of …” followed by a proper noun (e.g., Linux) → likely refers to a variant of software. “Flavor additive” or “flavour profile” in a sentence about food → points to the taste/smell meaning. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Distractor: “Flavour only describes taste.” – Wrong because smell is also part of flavour. Distractor: “A Linux flavor is a food additive for computers.” – Wrong; “flavor” in this case is a distribution, not an edible additive. Distractor: “All Linux flavors have the same package set.” – Wrong; each distribution (flavor) bundles its own set of packages and defaults.
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