Copy (command)
Different implementations provide various capabilities, such as:
ImplementationsThe command is available in RT-11,[3] OS/8,[4] RSX-11,[5] ISIS-II,[6] iRMX 86,[7] TOPS-10,[8] TOPS-20,[9] OpenVMS,[10] MetaComCo TRIPOS,[11] HDOS,[12] Z80-RIO,[13] OS-9,[14] DOS, FlexOS,[15] 4690 OS,[16] PC-MOS,[17] HP MPE/iX,[18] OS/2,[19] Windows,[20] ROM-DOS,[21] ReactOS,[22] SymbOS, DexOS, and 86-DOS.[23] Under IBM PC DOS/MS-DOS the command is available since version 1.[24] Some shells provide a copy command with a different name. In Unix-based systems, the copy command is DOSThe following copies existing file fromfile to path tofile'. copy fromfile tofile A file can be copied to a device. The following sends a file to the printer on lpt1. copy letter.txt lpt1 The following outputs to stdout, like the copy letter.txt con The following concatenates the page# files into
The command can copy files between drives. The following uses text mode to copy text of the file; stopping when it reaches an EOF character. copy /a doc1.txt + doc2.txt doc3.txt copy /a *.txt doc3.txt The following uses binary mode; concatenating files in their entirety; ignoring EOF characters. copy /b image1.jpg + image2.jpg image3.jpg See also
References
Further reading
External linksWikibooks has a book on the topic of: Guide to Windows Commands |
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