The COPY command
a copy command would copy the contents of the selection and when you paste it somewhere else, the original contents would still be there. the contents would be available in both the original location and the new location a cut command would remove the contents of the selection and when you paste it somewhere else, the original contents would be lost. it would be available in the new location only.
class X { public: X(); // default constructor X(const X& x); // copy constructor // ... }; int main(void) { X objx1; //normal ctor X objx2 = x1; // copy ctor X x3(x2); // copy ctor }
COPY leaves the original(s) intact; MOVE does not.
it copies the ios FLASH to TFTP SERVER
A move command is simply a copy command which deletes the original once it's finished.
For mac: command c for copy and command v for paste. For PC: control c for copy and control v for paste.
To copy directory, you need to run xcopy command.. You can not copy directory with copy command.. xcopy c:\*.* /s/e a:\ This will copy entire contents to A drive..
In MS-DOS, the copy con command is used for the creation of files from the command line. From the command line enter "copy con" and the name of the file desired to be created.
copy
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command c to copy and command v to paste
The COPY command
1. Highlight the text 2. Hold down control 3. while holding down control click down on the mouse 4. Press copy 5. Repeat steps 1-3 6. Press Paste
Not sure why you'd want to copy notepad.exe anywhere, however the command is: copy c:\windows\notepad.exe "c:\my folder"
a copy command would copy the contents of the selection and when you paste it somewhere else, the original contents would still be there. the contents would be available in both the original location and the new location a cut command would remove the contents of the selection and when you paste it somewhere else, the original contents would be lost. it would be available in the new location only.
Copy words? Select the words you want to copy, hit command-c and if you want to paste it somewhere, hit command-v. (Command is the "apple-key", situated to the left of the space-bar). Oka?