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The Cut command is used to
Yes, if you make an ISO image of the disc first. Copying manually may not copy the files correctly.
No, they don't disappear, unless you use the command move to...
The pics will remain on the computer if they were copied, rather than moved, onto a Flash drive. To move files, as opposed to copying, on a Mac hold down the Command key (cmd) and click and drag a file's icon. Or just delete unwanted files after they have been copied.
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.
The Del or Erase command in command prompt.
syntax: ls -aF -a option is for hidden files -F is for directories and executable files
All files in a directly can be copied without copying the sub directories using FTP by first highlighting them. This allows a user to specifically select only the files they want to transfer. If you are doing this via the command line interface using the mget command with a mask (such as *) will transfer all files except subdirectories.
The easiest way is to use the 'cp' command. Put the name of all the files in the 'cp' command line and use another directory as the target; all the files will be copied to the new directory. Note: you may need to use the -r (recursive) copy option if you have subdirectories in the source directory.
Source
Source
no