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Full Discussion: How to convert Dat to Bin
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users How to convert Dat to Bin Post 302130222 by pressy on Friday 3rd of August 2007 04:02:38 PM
Old 08-03-2007
are you looking for a tool to "compile" standard unix-scripts to an executable binary? Francisco Javier Rosales García wrote shc(1) which could be downloaded here (shc-3.8.6). I've tried that with some own ksh scripts, and it worked fine on Solaris 9 & 10 with SunStudio10.

best regards
- PRESSY
 

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CDTOA(1)						      General Commands Manual							  CDTOA(1)

NAME
cdtoa - To convert the binary format of a dictionary back to text format. SYNOPSIS
cdtoa [-n] [-s] [-z] [-e] [-E] infilename [-h cixingfile ] [ usagefreqfile ] DEFAULT PATH
/usr/local/bin/cWnn4/cdtoa DESCRIPTION
To convert the binary format of the dictionary to text format, and output to standard output(stdout). infilename is the name of the input binary format dictionary. The output may be piped into a file by using the ">" command. For example, cdtoa dict.dic > dict.u "dict.u" here is the output text format dictionary, while the "dict.dic" is the input binary format dictionary. usagefreqfile may indicate more than one user usage frequency files (for a particular user). These usage frequency information will be reflected in the text format dictionary created. OPTIONS
-s To order the entries in text dictionary according to Pinyin or Zhuyin. -n To attach sequence numbers to the output. -z To convert the binary format back to text format in Zhuyin. (Note: default is Pinyin) -e If the Hanzi inside the text dictionary contains characters such as space and tab, they will be compacted to special format. (Default) -E If the Hanzi inside the text dictionary contains characters such as space and tab, they will NOT be compacted to special format. -h cixingfile To specify the Cixing definition file. NOTE
1. The parts in [ ] are options. They may be omitted. 2. The Pinyin and Zhuyin dictionary has the same format. 3. The default conversion result of the text dictionary is in Pinyin. 13 May 1992 CDTOA(1)
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