sure, ls * | less
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
Thanks - All
I have been a GUI person for a long time and am just now starting to explore
command line recovery tactics due to the crash of an old clunker MS box. No
supprise on the crash it being MS and I can fix that in short order but there
are several files and directories that I have a pr
> 2. I have no problem changing to any directory that does not have
spaces in
> it but I have no idea of how to account for a space in a directory
like in
> the command "cd My Document"?
You could also try this:
$ cd "My Document"
It works on my system, but might not on yours. Hope this he
On Sat, Oct 05, 2002 at 07:35:48PM -0400, Frank Roberts - SOTL wrote:
> 1. Is there an option to the ls command that will allow the scroll to page
> like the old dos command dir -p would? O'Reilly's Linux in a Nutshell does not
> so indicate but I have a hard time believing that this is so; that
At 07:35 PM 10/5/02 -0400, Frank Roberts - SOTL wrote:
>[...]
>1. Is there an option to the ls command that will allow the scroll to page
>like the old dos command dir -p would? O'Reilly's Linux in a Nutshell does
>not
>so indicate but I have a hard time believing that this is so; that just does
After studious consultation with several of my Linux books and an all day
experience in attempting to access the hard drive of a Windows box using
Tomsrtbt I have a couple of command line questions.
Background: Box was started on Tomsrtbt and HD was successful mounted.
ls -a > Windors-C.