touch "abcd efgh"
touch 'abcd efgh'
touch abcd\ efgh
are three possibilities, given that you use a Linux shell. Otherwise, it may depend on the specifics of the software (e.g. libreoffice, emacs, firefox...), usually you can do it staghtforwardly when saving a file.
As files can be of any number of types, there is no single command that will do this. You would use the program associated with that file type to create a file. If you wanted to create a "blank" file, that has no content and uses no space, use the command touch filename.
The easiest way is to create a file with a name ending in .php (such as info.php), containing only these 3 lines: <? phpinfo(); ?> Upload this file to your web space and access it using your browser. It will show a lot of information about your webserver and the php version running on it.
A source code file is a plain-text file containing C++ instructions. The instructions must be compiled and linked to create a native machine code executable.
To create a PHP script all you have to do is create a new file, then save the file as "filename.php". It must have a .php file extension.After that open the file and put in the PHP tags like shown.Then you write your PHP script within those tags and upload to your web space and check it out.
One way that will work is to use Unix commands to create a text file containing that list and print the text file. There are probably other ways too.
You don't "get" it. You create one from a directory containing the files you want to be in the file system image. A SquashFS image can be created by using the command mksquashfs /path/to/dir imagename.sqsh
A metafile is a file containing information that describes or specifies another file.
A metafile is a file containing information that describes or specifies another file.
hash file organisation is containing the record of the file.
source file
You cannot and such a conversion would make no sense.a .png is a type of graphics file, it contains one"drawing"an .iso is a file containing a copy of a complete CD or DVD, including the directory, track structure, files, etc.There is not enough information in a .png file to be able to convert it to a .iso file. However if you just want to create an .iso file containing one .png file, there is probably CD or DVD burning software that will allow you to create an .iso file of the contents you want to "burn" to the CD or DVD and just not perform the physical "burn" but keep the .iso file. But it seems like a big waste of time and space as the .iso file will be many times larger than the original single .png file.
In the SAM file.