Hey, *that's* where the deltree functionality went. I wondered about
that. I just tested that out, and it works like a charm! Thanks for
the tip!
On 7/14/06, Adam Zey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Andrew Kreps wrote:
> [forwarding my response to the list, as the reply function didn't quite
> work]
>
>
> Actually, that's not true. 'rm -rf' removes all files, directories
> and subdirectories. Microsoft's del has no analogy to that (although
> there was a deltree command in older versions of DOS). You still have
> to manually (or programmatically) iterate through the directory
> structure and run 'del *.*' and then 'rd directory' in every single
> subdirectory to achieve the same result that the single command 'rm
> -rf' gives you on UNIX-like systems.
>
> On 7/14/06, Adam Zey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> So? Windows has this thing called the "del" command that does the same
>> thing as "rm".
>>
>> Regards, Adam.
>>
Sure it does. I logged into a Win2K box and got help for rmdir/rd:
C:\>rmdir /?
Removes (deletes) a directory.
RMDIR [/S] [/Q] [drive:]path
RD [/S] [/Q] [drive:]path
/S Removes all directories and files in the specified directory
in addition to the directory itself. Used to remove a
directory
tree.
/Q Quiet mode, do not ask if ok to remove a directory tree with /S
It seems like "rmdir /S /Q <directory>" is exactly identical to "rm -rf
<directory>". It deletes a directory tree (the -r), and doesn't prompt
or display anything (the -f).
So, yes, this *CAN* be done on Windows. Sorry if I was wrong about del
originally, but my point stands, Windows is not entirely crippled when
it comes to the shell :)
Regards, Adam.
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