Does someone understand this:
First: ====== ~> sound-recorder /tmp/file.wav Sound Recorder version 0.06 (Build on Feb 24 2002) Copyright (C) 1997-2000 by B. Warmerdam under GPL. This program is free software and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. Record from dsp (no cdrom support). To end the recording press CTRL-C File can't be created (use -k to override overwrite protection). Second: ======= ~> sound-recorder -k /tmp/file.wav Sound Recorder version 0.06 (Build on Feb 24 2002) Copyright (C) 1997-2000 by B. Warmerdam under GPL. This program is free software and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. sound-recorder: invalid option -- k Options: -c Number of channels [1/2] -s Samplerate of the recording -b Bits per sample [8/16] -k Keep going if destination file already exists (overwrite) -P Use a higher priority for recording thread -A Audio device (default /dev/dsp) -e Execute this statement after recording (eg 'rm $file') -S The recording time (mm:ss) -f Output format [wav/pcm/cdr/ima3/ima4/ima5] -h This information The file /tmp/file.wav exists and I own it. I don't understand the "invalid option -- k" and the "-k Keep going if destination file already exists (overwrite)". Aren't they contradictories? Thank you, Ionel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]