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CVOUTILS.ARJ
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CVO Utilities
Copyright Notice and Software License
**********************************************
* *
* This is not free software. *
* *
**********************************************
This document, other accompanying written and disk-based notes and
specifications, and all referenced and related program files, accompanying
this document are copyrighted by CVO, a French corporation. The copyright
owner hereby licenses you to: make as many copies of the software and
documentation as you wish; give exact copies of the original to anyone; and
distribute the software and documentation in its unmodified form via
electronic means. There is no charge for any of the above.
You are specifically prohibited from charging or requesting donations for any
such copies, however made. Exceptions may be granted to organizations which
charge a small fee for materials, handling, postage and general overhead. NO
ORGANIZATION IS AUTHORIZED TO CHARGE ANY AMOUNT FOR DISTRIBUTION OF THE
SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENTATION UNDER ANY OTHER CONDITIONS.
This license allows you to use this software without charge for a period of
30 days only.
If you wish to continue using this software in all or in part, you must
register, using the Register Form below, and paying the Registration Fee.
Registration fee for this softawre is a one-time payment of $30 for use
on one machine only.
No copy of the software may be distributed or given away without this
accompanying documentation; this notice must not be removed.
Warranty
There is no warranty of any kind associated with this software, and the
copyright owner is not liable for damages of any kind. By using this software,
you agree to this. Every effort has been made by the author to make this
product bug-free. However, the nature of software development is that it is
impossible to guarantee bug-free software.
In the event a verifiable bug is found, the author's only obligation will be
to make every attempt to repair the bug as soon as possible.
Order Form
CVO Utilities Registration Form
Name: ______________________________________
Address: ______________________________________
______________________________________
City: ______________________________________
State: __________________________ Zip: ______
Telephone: ______________________________________
Item Quantity Total
--------------------------------------------------------------
One-time fee for the first machine......... 1 $ 30
for multi-users only:
$ 5 fee per machine using this software
within the same organization...............
--------------------------------------------------------------
Total Due: _________
Payment thru: VISA
or check
Preferred Disk Size: 3.5" ____ 5.25" ____
Mail Completed Form to:
DPTool Club
BP 745
59657 Villeneuve d'Asq
FRANCE
______________________________________________________________________________
A Set of Utilities,
developped over the years, whenever the need arises,
or a fancy.
______________________________________________________________________________
attr
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: attr [-flags ...] filespec filespec ...
Finds all specified files (wildcards allowed) with archive bit set in the
current directory.
Flags: -i lists files with archive bit reset.
-r recursively searchs subdirectories.
-c displays absolute path.
-n displays only file names.
-p pauses every 20 lines.
-h or ?, displays a help screen
______________________________________________________________________________
bakdel
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: bakdel
Deletes all .bak files from current and subdirectories. Pauses every 20 lines.
______________________________________________________________________________
bckctl
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: bckctl [u:]control.xxx
Lists the content of a backup disk with path and file names.
______________________________________________________________________________
catcmp
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: catcmp first_directory second_directory
Compares two dictories and displays in three columns: files exclusive to the
first directory, files exclusive to the second directory and common files.
Use Esc and arrows to move from one list to the other. Quit with Esc.
______________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
catlin
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage
catlin [-x or -d] [-y -c] file file ...
displays a list of selected files in alphabetical order.
Flags:
-c displays the absolute path
-y chronological order
-x to select and display files (See Expose)
-d to select and erase files
Catlin ? displays a help screen
______________________________________________________________________________
catlist
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: catlist [-flag...] filespec filespec ...
Finds all specified files (wildcards allowed) in the current directory.
Flags -r recursively searchs subdirectories.
-aN displays only files with mode bit N (0-7). See chmod.
-d displays directories only.
-c displays absolute path.
-n displays only filenames.
-p pauses every 20 lines.
-v displays length, date and time.
-o computes disk occupation in bytes and clusters of
current drive.
_____________________________________________________________________________
catname
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: catname filespec
Displays a list of selected files (wildcards allowed) in alphabetical order.
Then you can select any file and rename it. Catname is useful in renaming a
file whose name is accidentally unacceptable for DOS.
_____________________________________________________________________________
catsort
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: catsort
Sorts the directory in alphabetical order. For safety reasons, it can take a
while on a big directory and it does not sort root.
_____________________________________________________________________________
chkdt
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: chkdt dummy_arg
chkdt [-i]
With a dummy arg, chkdt displays the system date as an unsigned number. (See
xdate)
Without arg, chkdt waits for key entry of an unsigned date and returns 0 if
this date is greater than, or equal to, system date. Otherwise it returns the
difference (up to 255).
Flag -I reverses the test.
Chkdt is useful in testing that system date is acceptable. For instance:
1. Create a file DATE.TST as follows:
c:
cd \
echo 65534 >date.tst
2. add to your autoexec.bat:
@chkdt <date.tst
@if errorlevel 1 goto DATE_ERROR
@goto DATE_END
:DATE_ERROR
@echo Either System Date or Battery seems out of order
@echo Check date and time now
DATE
TIME
:DATE_END
@chkdt dummy >c:\date.tst
3. restart system twice.
Chkdt is useful also to see if somebody makes backups regularly:
First have a .bat file like:
@backup c:\appl\*.* a: /s
@chkdt dummy >c:\appl.tst
then add to your autoexec.bat:
@chkdt -i <c:\appl.tst
@if errorlevel 3 goto _MISSING_BACKUP
@goto _REGULAR_BACKUP
:_MISSING_BACKUP
@echo No APPL backup done since 3 or more days, you lazy !
:_REGULAR_BACKUP
_____________________________________________________________________________
chmod
_____________________________________________________________________________
Usage: chmod file_name acces_mode
Changes the acces mode to
0 no qualification
1 read only
2 hidden
3 (read only, hidden)
4 system
5 (read only, system)
6 (hidden, system)
7 (read only, hidden, system)
______________________________________________________________________________
columns
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
Columns lines chars n_tab tab1 tab2 .... <file
lines: number of lines
(paper height less your top margin)
chars: number of char columns on your paper
n_tab: number of tabs
tab1, tab2... each printed column first char
Example:
columns 60 150 2 0 75 <doc >prn
would print doc file in two columns of 60 lines on a 150 chars wide paper.
First column would start at 0, second column at 75. Assuming the printer has
been set up to 11 inch paper and 12cpi, you would obtain two parallel pages.
Number of tabs is limited only by the number of characters acceptable on a
command line.
______________________________________________________________________________
concat.c
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: concat [-a or -b] [-d or -w] [-q] destination file1 file2...
Appends file1, file2 etc. to destination.
Wildcards are allowed in the file(x) names.
Flags:
-d deletes source files without warning
-w deletes source files after YN prompt
default is NO delete
-q dont display progress
-a all files are ascii
-b all files are binary
DEFAULT is binary
With -a flag, end-of-file mark will be removed. Otherwise, all files are
assumed to be binary. However the program would eventually find out text
files and request confirmation.
NOTES: as compared to many of similar programs, concat has an advantage and a
drawback:
1. Naming the destination file in the list of source files DOES NOT destroy
destination file.
2. Dont forget the -a flag if you concat text files. If you forget it,
the end-of-file mark (hexa 1A) will not be removed and a part of
destination file may not be readable. If you have made this mistake
EX1A utility can repair your file.
______________________________________________________________________________
c_print
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: c_print file_name record description destin
translates a fixed length record text file to a binary file.
file_name is the name of a text file,
record is the length of each record (CRLF include)
description is similar to a(0)6u(26)5f(6)8
where:
(n) is the data offset within the record
A(..)n n ascii characters
I(..)n an integer to be printed into n columns
U(..)n an unsigned integer
L(..)n a long integer
F(..)n a float
D(..)n a double
C(..)n a double * 100
Y(..) a date (DD MM YY)
X(..)n insert n binary zeros
destin is the name of the binary file.
______________________________________________________________________________
cpyext
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: cpyext file_1 record_length_1 file_2 record_length_2
Copies file_1 to file_2, record by record. If length_2 is less than length_1,
each record is truncated. Otherwise each record is padded with trailing
binary zeros.
______________________________________________________________________________
delfdate
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage
delfdate [-d -p] days files...
deletes specified files if 'days' old as compared to system date. Wildcard
are allowed, even in directory names.
Flags:
-d deletes the directory if empty
-p requires confirmation before deleting
Example:
delfdate -p 90 b:\cl\fct.*\*.tmp
______________________________________________________________________________
dirdel
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: dirdel
Displays name and removes subdirectories if empty.
______________________________________________________________________________
dprint
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: dprint file_name [>output]
where file_name is the name of a parameter file.
Dprint formats a binary file to standard output, a file or a printer.
Parameter file contains for instance:
F filename the name of the binary file
L 26 its record length
D a(0)6u(6)5y(8)d(10)+12.2x(0)12 first line description of the output
D x(0)6x(0)5x(0)8x(0)12d(18)+12.2 second line description
O -g a flag
O -p66.5 another flag
Except for D'lines, parms order is immaterial. Max.D: 10 lines
D lines describe the input and its formatting, like:
a(0)6u(26)5f(6)+8.2d(20)10.2
(x) is the data offset within the record
A(x)n n ascii characters
I(x)n,U(x) prints an Integer (Unsigned) into n columns
L(x)n a long integer
F(x)n.m prints a float into n col. including . and m decimals
D(x)n.m a double
C(x)n.m a double which will be divided by 100
Y(x) a numerical date MM DD YY
X(0)n a dummy variable to be replaced by n blanks.
+ (like I(5)+4 or D(9)+10.2) summs the variable. See -a below
Flags:
-sSTRING uses STRING as separator - default is a space,
-sNULL no separator
-s124 uses | as separator ('<' and '>' are illegal)
-pn.m formfeeds m lines before nth line (default is nothing)
-n counts pages starting at 2 (valid only with -p)
-cnn counts lines starting at nn up to 65500
-g adorns with semigraphics (or *,|,- if -s124 is active)
-d inserts blank lines
-a prints + noted variables summation.
-ttexte add 'texte' as a title to first page. Can be repeated.
-fname prints 'name' file on top of first page.
-mnn nn chars left margin
-hn 1 = 10cpi, 2 = 12cpi, 3 = 16cpi.
______________________________________________________________________________
easter
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: easter
easter YY
easter YYYY
Displays the full dates of Easter, Holy Thursday and Whitsunday.
Default to current year. YYYY is valid from 1950 to 2049. YY default to 19xx
(50-99) or to 20xx (0-49)
______________________________________________________________________________
elimpr
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: elimpr
I dislike that PrintScreen key, don't you ? Elimpr is a very slim resident
(26 bytes) which prevents its action.
______________________________________________________________________________
esctst
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: esctst number letter ....
Example: esctst 27 C 66 >prn
Esctst suppress blanks and prints args in binary form. Divert output to
printer or file or the like.
______________________________________________________________________________
ex1a
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: ex1a file_name
Ex1a strips embedded end-of-files characters 1Ah.
______________________________________________________________________________
expose
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: expose file_name
Expose is a simply minded wiewer for ascii files. Printer commands imbedded
in the file are transparent to expose. Virtually all IBM PROPRINTER sequences
are made unvisible.
______________________________________________________________________________
expr
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: expr
Expr is a calculator which can evaluate an infix expression. You can freely
creates variables, by giving them a name in the left part of an expression.
Use logically the parenthesis.
Grammar:
[variable =] expression
evaluates the expression and set the variable if present.
Example:
(1 + sqrt 16) * 2
r = (1 + sqrt 16) * 2
Then r receives the value and can be used later on like this:
result = r + 1
Operators: + - * / ^ ( )
acos - asin - atan - cos - sin - tan - cosh - sinh -
tanh - log - log10 - exp - ceil - fabs - floor - sqrt
Constants: PI, E , R2 or pi, e , r2
______________________________________________________________________________
ext
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: ext [dummy]
Displays all extensions used in the current directory. With a dummy arg,
recursively searchs subdirectories.
______________________________________________________________________________
f13
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: f13
f13 YY
f13 YYYY
Let's be straight. There in this world careless people who dont believe in
ghosts, who would start a new business on a Friday, or pat a black cat on the
left side of the street.
You and me know better and appreciate f13. Try it.
______________________________________________________________________________
factor
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: factor number
Factors numbers between 1 and 2,497,525,535.
______________________________________________________________________________
filesplit
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
filesplit file f1 f2 pattern_file
copies file partially to f1 and f2 as defined in the pattern file.
f1 will receive record whose keys compute to less or equal, f2 will receive
records whose keys compute to greater than the test key described in the
pattern file.
The pattern file contains the record length, and, for each key, its type,
length, offset and content.
For instance:
226 ... record length
14 ascii, ascending, uper case or lower case
25 key length
0 its offset
2 unsigned short integer
2 its length
61 its offset
Types are:
ascending descending length
ascii 0 7 arbitrary
signed short int 1 8 2
unsigned short int 2 9 2
long int 3 10 4
float 4 11 4
double 5 12 8
numerical date 6 13 2
ascii (uper or lower case) 14 15 arbitrary
______________________________________________________________________________
first
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: first mon[day]
first mon[day] YY MM
first mon[day] YYYY MM
Displays the full date of the first specified week day of current month or of
specified month and year.
YYYY is valid from 1950 to 2049. YY default to 19xx (50-99) or to 20xx (0-49)
______________________________________________________________________________
fltgraph
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: fltgraph <input >output
fltgraph is a filter which replaces the semi-graphic characters by *, | or -.
______________________________________________________________________________
freedisk
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: freedisk
Displays disk occupation, like:
Disk C
15512 clusters
4 sectors / cluster
512 bytes / sector
31768576 bytes (total disk)
950272 bytes (unused)
______________________________________________________________________________
freemem
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: freemem
Displays memory occupation, like:
total memory: 524288
available memory: 433984
______________________________________________________________________________
gcd
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: gcd number_1 number_2
Computes the greatest common divisor of the two numbers.
_____________________________________________________________________________
home
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: home
Home is a customized menu which can be conveniently installed on the root
directory.
Assuming you have three applications, home would present:
┌─────────────────┐
│ Word processing │
│ Invoicing │
│ Graphics │
└─────────────────┘
Use the arrows to move in the list and Enter to select an item. (If they
all have different initials, you can use the first letter instead).
To customise Home, type:
home home.cmd
home.cmd (or any other suitable name) would contain:
word processing
c:
.
cd \wp
invoicing
c:
.
cd \inv
graphics
d:
cd \grph
Rules:
1. two lines for each command: one for the displayed text, one for
a DOS command or a program name.
2. if more commands are needed, add a line with only a period and a line
for another command.
3. a command like ■prog would execute the program 'prog'. This
should be avoided if prog is a very big program.
4. in some configurations, you may find that your intended last command
in a sequence 'falls' upon the next sequence. Then terminates the
sequence by
.
exit
______________________________________________________________________________
impcol
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
impcol [flags] file c1 c2 .... [>output]
impcol [flags] file @param [>output]
impcol config
prints selected columns from a file.
Example:
impcol file_x 80 92 50 62
would displays columns 80-92 and 50-62 of file_x, using some formatting rules:
1. impcol compares resulting width to 80, 96 and 132 and eventually sets
10cpi, 12cpi or 16cpi or fails with a warning.
2. impcols returns to DOS the columns width it has selected (80, 96 ...)
3. centers the text
4. assumes a 72 lines paper (12') and a bottom margin of 5 lines.
5. if semigraphic characters are used in source file, checks if the
four angles are ┌ ┐ └ ┘.
Flags:
-tfile insert file on top of output.
-fN numbers pages
-g replaces semi-graphics with *, - and |.
-mN suppress centering and set left margin at N.
-hN forces to 1 = 10 cpi, 2 = 12cpi et 3 = 16 cpi.
-l assumes a 132 columns printer (default is 80) and
uses 132, 160, 218.
-lN1,N2,N3 forces three other printer width formats.
-pm.c m lines/page, n lines bottom margin.
Typing:
impcol config
you may change permanently the default parameters.
Selected columns must be given by pairs. Their numbers is limited only by the
DOS command args limit. If you need more column spec, place them in a
separate file, params, (each on a line) and use the syntax:
impcol [flag] file_name @params
______________________________________________________________________________
impess
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: impess
Impess is useful in testing printer adjustment before printing a large number
of preprinted forms.
You might for instance have a batch file like:
:PRN_TST
@impess >prn
@xprompt N Y "Another try ? (Y/N) "
@if errorlevel 1 goto PRN_TST
Impess would first be customized by typing:
impess config
and filing parameters. Example:
┌────┐ ┌──────┐
Characters per inch (10, 12, 16) │ 10 │ Lines per page │ 66 │
└────┘ └──────┘
┌───────trial text───────┬─line──┬─column──┐
│third line ------X │ 3 │ 10 │
│same--Y │ 0 │ 15 │
│fifth line ------------Z│ 5 │ 0 │
│ │ │ │
│ │ │ │
│ │ │ │
└────────────────────────┴───────┴─────────┘
Test stops at the first empty trial text. Enter absolute number for the first
line, relative numbers afterwards (0 is same line). Column number is relative
whithin same line, absolute otherwise.
______________________________________________________________________________
isafact
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: isafact number
Finds out if number is a factorial and displays its base.
______________________________________________________________________________
keypack
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
keypack [-e] [-lN] [-m] file_name [>output]
reads and formats a file made trough keyword.
Flags:
-e only eliminates multi-entries.
-lN set text width to N characters (default is 79).
-m change keywords to uppercase.
______________________________________________________________________________
keyword
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
keyword [flags] file file ....
read the listed files, display the text, stopping on each new word for the
operator to decide to retain or discard it.
Output file is a list of retained words following their page number.
Flags:
-kfile1 file for retained words; default: KEEP
-dfile2 file for discarded words; default: DISPOSE
-sfile3 output file; default: FKEY
-fN set the first page number to N
-l writes line numbers rather than page numbers
-i reverse process order (KEEP before DISPOSE)
Page numbers are defined by formfeed character (decimal 12). If there is no
formfeed, use the -l flag.
KEEP and DISPOSE can be edited and reused. See keypack for eliminating
multiple entries.
______________________________________________________________________________
laser
______________________________________________________________________________
Laser memorises and sends to printer command characters and control sequences.
As a matter of fact, laser is useful with any kind of printers, not only
lasers.
Usage:
1. laser ?
Displays a help screen.
2. laser config
To entrer commands. The screen would display the like:
─Symbol───── ─Description────────────────── ─Sequence─────────────────────
10 10 c.p.i. 18
12 12 c.p.i. 18,27,58
16 16 c.p.i. 18,15
66 11 inches 27,67,66
Symbol is a short name (12 chars, no blank). Description shoud be self-
explanatory. Sequence must conform to your printer manuel spec.
3. laser -x laser.cmd
Another way to enter commands. Laser.cmd is a text file, in the
exemple:
10
10 c.p.i.
18
12
12 c.p.i.
18,27,58
16
16 c.p.i.
18,15
66
11 inches
27,67,66
4. laser
Displays the column 'Description'.
Use the arrows to move in the list, Enter to broadcast the
command, ESC to quit.
5. laser symbol symbol ...
broadcasts the commands corresponding to listed symbols.
Example:
laser 66 12
6. laser -p file_name [>output]
Laser works as a filter which translates printer commands
imbedded in the file. Those commands must be quoted with tilde (~)
like:
~12~~66~text.....
...~16~.......
______________________________________________________________________________
last
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: last mon[day]
last mon[day] YY MM
last mon[day] YYYY MM
Displays the full date of the last specified week day of current month or of
specified month and year.
YYYY is valid from 1950 to 2049. YY default to 19xx (50-99) or to 20xx (0-49)
______________________________________________________________________________
lcm least common multiple
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: lcm number_1 number_2
Computes the least common multiple of the two numbers.
______________________________________________________________________________
litteral
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: litteral number [units] [fracts]
Displays full written form of a number.
Example:
litteral 1234.56
litteral 1234.56 $
litteral 1234.56 $ cts
______________________________________________________________________________
modulo
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: modulo number_1 number_2
Displays the remainder or the division number_1 / number_2
______________________________________________________________________________
mvdir
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: mvdir path_1\filename_1 path_2\filename2
Moves filename_1 to the directory designated by path_2, changing its name in
the process. Path_1 and path_2 must be on the same drive.
______________________________________________________________________________
pgpr
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: pgpr file_name page_1 page_2
Prints one or several printer pages from a file. Pages are defined by
formfeed charactere (decimal 12)
______________________________________________________________________________
primes
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: primes
primes number
Displays primes numbers less than 'number' (default to 10000)
______________________________________________________________________________
removetab
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
removetab [-e ou -nN] [dummy arg]
reads standard input and write to standard output, replacing the tabs by an
appropriate number of blanks.
Flags:
-e to be used if the source file has been made with edlin
-nN N being the number (1-32) of blanks (default is 8)
dummy arg displays a help screen.
______________________________________________________________________________
split
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
split infile file1 file2 length [factor]
copies infile to file1 from 0 to length - 1
to file2 from length to end of infile
If factor is present, length is multiplicated by factor, allowing a record
* length definition.
One of file1 or file2 may be the NUL device.
______________________________________________________________________________
strip
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
strip [-d] file_name [>output]
Strips off control characters and escape sequences. Virtually all IBM
PROPRINTER sequences are recognized.
With -d flag, replaces formfeed by new line.
______________________________________________________________________________
touch
______________________________________________________________________________
Syntax:
touch [-dMM/JJ/AA] [-hHH:MM:SS] file ...
changes date and time of designated files.
Without flags, uses the system date and time.
Flags:
-d uses specified date
-h uses specified time
______________________________________________________________________________
tstarg
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: tstarg %1 %2 %3 ...
Counts args and returns their numbers.
Example:
@tstarg %1 %2 %3 %4
@if error_level 4 ...
@if error_level 3 ...
....
______________________________________________________________________________
tstempty
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: tstempty file_name
Example:
@tstempty \dir1\file1
@if errorlevel 2 ...
@if errorlevel 1 ...
tstempty returns:
2 if file_name is empty
1 if file_name does not exist
0 otherwise
______________________________________________________________________________
ucopy
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
ucopy file_name record_length drive:
Example:
ucopy manual 512 a:
Copies big files to several removable disks. (copy back from ucopy disks can
be made with 'copy ' for the first and 'concat' for the others).
During copying, ucopy totaly deletes destination disk. (the last ucopy disk
should not be used for another ucopy)
Ucopy labels disks ucopy_001 etc.
Record_length is used to round up each disk to a integer number of records.
Ucopy checks record_length for consistency and stops if there is an error.
However, if record_length is 512, no check is made. Use 512 to copy files
with no fixed record definition.
______________________________________________________________________________
where
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: where filespec
Looks for specified files (wildcards allowed) in the current directory and
its subdirectories.
______________________________________________________________________________
xdate
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage: xdate
Shows the numerical parameters of a date (between 1/1/1901 and 6/3/2080):
┌──date──┬─D/P─┬lpy┬─────────┬wk─┬D/Y┬─last Y─┬─last M─┬─this M─┐
│03 16 92│33313│0 │Monday │11 │76 │ 33237│ 33297│ 33328│
└────────┴─────┴───┴─────────┴───┴───┴───end──┴───end──┴───end──┘
and a command bar
┌─────────────────────────┐
│ Date Period day End │
└─────────────────────────┘
to select another date or another day-of-the-period.
______________________________________________________________________________
xdel
______________________________________________________________________________
Usage:
xdel [-q -r -d] file ...
deletes specified files in the current directory after a Yes/No prompt.
Flags:
-q requests global confirmation once,
instead of individual prompts.
-r recursively deletes files in the subdirectories.
-d removes subdirectories if empty.
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xfind
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Usage: xfind filespec [anywhere]
Finds all specified files (wildcards allowed) in the current directory and
its sub-directories.
With the 'anywhere' clause, searchs the entire disk.
If no wildcard has been used, indicates the most recent version and prompts
to update others, one at a time.
If no wildcard has been used and two or more files are identical, prompts to
delete all but one, one at a time.
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xprint
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Usage: same as print ( >prn )
xprint takes care of presence or absence of IBM LAN and emit a simple print
or a net print ... prn, as appropriate.
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xprompt
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Usage: xprompt template_1 template_2 message
Example: @xprompt black white "Is your car black or white ? "
@if errorlevel 1 ....
Displays the message and waits for key entry, which must be one of the
templates, upper or lower case. Returns 0 or 1 accordingly.
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