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Full Discussion: Copy code to vi
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Copy code to vi Post 48581 by rooh on Wednesday 10th of March 2004 03:48:48 PM
Old 03-10-2004
Copy code to vi

Hi,

whenever I copy a code to vi session from other script it just goes weird.

It just goes across the whole screen and looks really bizzare
If the code is small I can manually remove the tabs and indent it correctly but if it is 2000 lines it makes it really difficult.

Is there something I can do about it and how can I copy efficiently without getting the code all over the place.

Your help will be highly appreciated

Thanks
Rooh
 

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CP(1)							      General Commands Manual							     CP(1)

NAME
cp, cpdir - file copy SYNOPSIS
cp [-pifsmrRvx] file1 file2 cp [-pifsrRvx] file ... directory cpdir [-ifvx] file1 file2 OPTIONS
-p Preserve full mode, uid, gid and times -i Ask before removing existing file -f Forced remove existing file -s Make similar, copy some attributes -m Merge trees, disable the into-a-directory trick -r Copy directory trees with link structure, etc. intact -R Copy directory trees and treat special files as ordinary -v Display what cp is doing -x Do not cross device boundaries EXAMPLES
cp oldfile newfile # Copy oldfile to newfile cp -R dir1 dir2 # Copy a directory tree DESCRIPTION
Cp copies one file to another, or copies one or more files to a directory. Special files are normally opened and read, unless -r is used. -r also copies the link structure, something -R doesn't care about. The -s option differs from -p that it only copies the times if the target file already exists. A normal copy only copies the mode of the file, with the file creation mask applied. Set-uid bits are cleared if the owner cannot be set. (The -s flag does not patronize you by clearing bits. Alas -s and -r are nonstandard.) Cpdir is a convenient synonym for cp -psmr to make a precise copy of a directory tree. SEE ALSO
cat(1), mkdir(1), rmdir(1), ln(1), rm(1). CP(1)
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