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Date:      Sat, 12 May 2001 19:51:02 +0200
From:      Francois Kritzinger <ffkrz@iafrica.com>
To:        Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au>
Cc:        freeBSD Mailing List <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: COPY, CUT, PASTE (FILES)
Message-ID:  <3AFD7806.842060EA@iafrica.com>
References:  <3AFCE758.63DE32E1@iafrica.com> <20010512023703.A24989@dan.emsphone.com> <3AFD167F.7480F4C6@iafrica.com> <20010513005544.I26110@welearn.com.au>

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Sue Blake wrote:

> On Sat, May 12, 2001 at 12:54:55PM +0200, Francois Kritzinger wrote:
> > Dan Nelson wrote:
> >
> > > In the last episode (May 12), Francois Kritzinger said:
> > > > Is there a way to copy, cut and then paste files from the shell?
> > > > E.g. "cut *.txt" and then "cd other_directory" and then "paste"...
> > >
> > > You mean besides the all-in-one command "cp"?
> > >
> > > cp *.txt other_directory
> > >
> > > --
> > >         Dan Nelson
> > >         dnelson@emsphone.com
> >
> > No, for that you need to know exactly where you want to put the files.
> >
> > In this case you know that you want to copy or move the files somewhere,
> > you just dont know exactly where yet. Like in a file manager - when you
> > right click a file, you can select "copy" or "cut" (the files' paths get
> > written to a "clipboard") and then browse around till you find the dir
> > you want to put the files. Then when you find the dir in which you want
> > to put the files, you simply type (for example) "paste", and the files
> > get copied or moved into the current dir.
> >
> > Like a file manager.
>
> In your original request you said from the shell. If you need to
> navigate around a bit to find the destination, here's one way:
>
> $ ls                                             # read the file choices
> $ # mv first.file secondfile.zip letter*.txt     # # marks it as a comment
> $ ls -F /wherever                                # dir somewhere in here?
> $ ls -F /wherever/rightplace                     # yes, this directory
> $ # mv first.file secondfile.zip letter*.txt     # up-arrows, then edit...
> $ mv first.file secondfile.zip letter*.txt /wherever/rightplace
>
> For the final command, use the up arrow until you get to your earlier
> comment from the command-history. Then type the found destination path
> at the end (where you want to copy the files to), then jump to the
> beginning of the command line (^A might work) and delete the # sign.
>
> It's much easier than I made it look, so long as you resist any
> temptation to change directory. And of course you can mv or cp.
>
> If you regard that comment line as the "cut", it's a nice safe cut
> because the files don't leave their first directory until commanded to
> move to their new directory. So to abort, just don't run the last command.
>
> Let's say you're in the destination directory and looking for the files:
>
> $ ls /some/path                          # then use up-arrow
> $ ls /some/path/directory                # look for file names
> $ cp /some/path/directory/*.txt .        # notice dot for current dir
> $ cp /some/path/directory/*.gz .         # edit and repeat for others
>
> Because of the command history, this involves little typing and it
> is usually quicker than fiddling with the mouse, menus, etc.
>
> --
>
> Regards,
>         -*Sue*-
>

Hi

I wanted to know if there was a SINGLE command/utility in unix to do this.
I.e. a program like cp or mv which does it all in one go.
I'm sorry I guess I should have made that clearer. Thanks for your input
though :), and sorry for making you type all that out :(

Cheerio


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