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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Del - trash - restore CSH commands!! Post 302275628 by Visi_Ks on Sunday 11th of January 2009 04:25:57 PM
Old 01-11-2009
Del - trash - restore CSH commands!!

Anyone who could help me with those three commands, i'm really new in cshell script so please be understandable..

Need to demostrate those three commands
del

trash (incl -ai) i that you will be asked to confirmed that they can be deleted
a to move all those files from dustbin

and to restore the files that have ben deleted and trash ... used (-n) should restore the file to the original directory.

1. start a shell to creat a file
2. delete that file
3. creat another file
4. trash that file
5. restore deleted and trash files

Hope anyone can help me with those three commands
 

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File::Remove(3) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   File::Remove(3)

NAME
File::Remove - Remove files and directories SYNOPSIS
use File::Remove 'remove'; # removes (without recursion) several files remove( '*.c', '*.pl' ); # removes (with recursion) several directories remove( 1, qw{directory1 directory2} ); # removes (with recursion) several files and directories remove( 1, qw{file1 file2 directory1 *~} ); # trashes (with support for undeleting later) several files trash( '*~' ); DESCRIPTION
File::Remove::remove removes files and directories. It acts like /bin/rm, for the most part. Although "unlink" can be given a list of files, it will not remove directories; this module remedies that. It also accepts wildcards, * and ?, as arguments for filenames. File::Remove::trash accepts the same arguments as remove, with the addition of an optional, infrequently used "other platforms" hashref. SUBROUTINES
remove Removes files and directories. Directories are removed recursively like in rm -rf if the first argument is a reference to a scalar that evaluates to true. If the first arguemnt is a reference to a scalar then it is used as the value of the recursive flag. By default it's false so only pass 1 to it. In list context it returns a list of files/directories removed, in scalar context it returns the number of files/directories removed. The list/number should match what was passed in if everything went well. rm Just calls remove. It's there for people who get tired of typing remove. clear The "clear" function is a version of "remove" designed for use in test scripts. It takes a list of paths that it will both initially delete during the current test run, and then further flag for deletion at END-time as a convenience for the next test run. trash Removes files and directories, with support for undeleting later. Accepts an optional "other platforms" hashref, passing the remaining arguments to remove. Win32 Requires Win32::FileOp. Installation not actually enforced on Win32 yet, since Win32::FileOp has badly failing dependencies at time of writing. OS X Requires Mac::Glue. Other platforms The first argument to trash() must be a hashref with two keys, 'rmdir' and 'unlink', each referencing a coderef. The coderefs will be called with the filenames that are to be deleted. SUPPORT
Bugs should always be submitted via the CPAN bug tracker <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=File-Remove> For other issues, contact the maintainer. AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Some parts copyright 2006 - 2012 Adam Kennedy. Taken over by Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org> to fix the "deep readonly files" bug, and do some package cleaning. Some parts copyright 2004 - 2005 Richard Soderberg. Taken over by Richard Soderberg <perl@crystalflame.net> to port it to File::Spec and add tests. Original copyright: 1998 by Gabor Egressy, <gabor@vmunix.com>. This program is free software; you can redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.16.3 2012-03-19 File::Remove(3)
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