Ben Dover.Exe
-Wedlake answers incorporated
chkdsk
ntbackup.exe
Msconfig.exe
Ntbackup.exe
gerp
The same way you would remove any other named file. The only problems would arise if it was some how a system file.
wc is the word count utility. wc <file name> would return four values number of lines, number of words, number of characters, filename of the file processed
I THINK.... That there is no .exe for it but just a lot of separate files making the utility up in this file locationVista: C:\Windows\winsxs\BackupCorrect me if I am wrong...Actually the correct answer to what is the program file name of the windows backup utility depends on what Windows OS, you are using. If it's Vista, then it's the Backup and Restore Center which handles all files that can be backed up. For Windows 2000/XP, then its a program file called Ntbackup.exe. From there you just click Start, then All Programs, then go to Accessories, then go to System Tools, and then click Backup. Hope this is the information you're looking for.JRay25
File Name
If there is an invalid cell reference you will see #REF! in the cell. If you refer to a defined range name that does not exist or a function name that does not exist you will see the #NAME! error.
You're computer is regonising a file as an "Unknown File" only because it has no understanding of that file extention. Right click the file and select "Properties", find the extention name (Eg, .exe) and search for software that will read that extention name. If you're having further problems consult someone on a Technical Help Forum.
You cannot have a file name containing a question mark; it is an invalid character. However, you can use the question mark as a wildcard. E.g., to list every .txt file that has exactly two characters in its file name you would use the following command: dir ??.txt The '?' wildcard simply means any one character. If you wish to specify any group of characters, use the asterisk wildcard instead: dir *.txt For more information, look up "wildcard" in the command line documentation. Most systems limit a file name to alphabet letters A-Z (and a-z) and numbers 0-9 and some special characters such as "$", "_", "#" with a single period separating the name part from an extension part (i.e. document.txt spreadsheet.xls). However, the actual directory structure in modern systems uses 8-bit characters for the file name so it is not impossible to have "invalid" characters in a file name. On the Microsoft platforms, a system or hardware misadventure can resulted in a corrupted file name entry with punctuation or non-printable characters in the file name. Some utilities deal with this by displaying question mark characters as printable substitutes for them. Unix/linux implementations, being less restrictive, allow file names to have non-printable characters by using the backslash ("\") escape code.