That would be:
ls -la c*
Bash will do magic trick and find all files starting 'c' letter and the command will look like this:
ls -la cat.txt catalog.txt cars.jpg
And ls will print out each file details.
Use the command: ls z* for those files in your current working directory.
find . name \*word report\!.log
All things come to those who wait.
c:\windows\system32\config\regback
There are a few kitchen appliances which begin with the letter H. Two of those appliances are a hotplate and a hand mixer.
Hundreds of words begin and end with the letter g. A few of those words include gag, gabbing, gambling, gardening, gazing, gasping and giggling.
DISKCOPY is the command to copy all of the files to memory and then copy those files to another disk. Unfortunately, it does not copy to multiple disks. Here is the syntax: DISKCOPY [drive1: [drive2:]] [/1] [/V] [/M] /1 Copies only the first side of the disk. /V Verifies that the information is copied correctly. /M Force multi-pass copy using memory only.
Germany is comprised of 16 states. None of those states begin with the letter E.
Opportunity or own decision. Those words mean freedom and begin with O.
No. Header files are those which contains declaration part of function & library files are those which contains definition part of function. These are those functions which we called in our program by using header files.
Compiling and running are two completely different procedures. To compile a C program you need a C compiler and linker (two separate programs). Once the source code has been compiled to object files you then need to link those files to create an executable. Once you have an executable you can run it. There's nothing particularly special about compiling from the command line as opposed to compiling within an integrated development environment (IDE). They both do exactly the same thing. However, an IDE is easier because it not only helps you easily organise your project files, it can build (compile and link) and execute the program with a single command. The end result is exactly the same as you would get by manually compiling, linking and executing from the command line. Command lines include a bewildering array of options and switches (parameters). To make sense of them, it is best to use the IDE and examine the command line that it generates for you, changing compiler and linker options to see what effect that has on the command line. Once the IDE command line settings are exactly the way you want them you can copy/paste those command lines into a command file (*.cmd) or a batch file (*.bat) which you can easily invoke from the command line.
curiouso - curious calmo - calm Those are just the first two I could think of.