Unix problem
Jerry Heyman
zebr360 at ut-emx.uucp
Mon Apr 22 14:11:26 AEST 1991
In article <1991Apr21.124135.7732 at tjhsst.vak12ed.edu> kdeyoe at tjhsst.vak12ed.edu (Kelly DeYoe) writes:
|>In article <14425 at medusa.cs.purdue.edu> wangjw at ifestos.cs.purdue.edu () writes:
|>>Hi,
|>>
|>> I was using the X-window and somehow generated some garbage files. I
|>>cannot remove some files because these files are named "-C", "-f" etc.
|>>Can someone tell me how to remove these garbages?
|>>
|>> Thanks.
|>>
|>>Jingwen Wang
|>>
|>>wangjw at cs.purdue.edu
|>
|>
|>To get rid of these files, or simply be able to rename them to
|>something more managable, you can go to the parent directory and
|>manipulate them that way. i.e.:
|>
|>cd ..
|>rm dir/-C (assuming you started in directory dir)
|>
|>and *poof*, it's gone. . .
|>
another way is to preface the files with ./ (for current directory) followed
by their name. that way:
rm ./-C
works fine. Unix expects any thing following a '-' sign to be an option
to the command invoked. It doesn't differentiate between them and file names
that happen to be the same.
|>KD
jerry
--
Jerry Heyman by day: IBM PSP, AIX Development
zebr360 at emx.utexas.edu by nite: Adjunct Lecturer at St. Edward's Univ.
*All comments are my own and should not be construed to represent any one else
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