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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
I formated my hard disk and i recovered some videos, but the thing is the videos were in .MOV format and now there are just UNIX executable files, i tried to write at the end of the name the extension but quicktime didn't recognize me the videos, somebody can help me with this problem... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: arielorc
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2. OS X (Apple)
I just joined the Forum a few days ago! :) I have a mac book and decided to look under the hood. Low and behold, UNIX! To be honest, I know nothing about unix, but I want to learn. I have no real goals as of yet, other than to learn what I can. I do own a few domains hosted by a good company. ... (4 Replies)
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi,
i'm running mac 10.5, and i have a file eg. program after i compiled on the terminal using this command;
cc -o program program.c
however, i'm unable to see the process hierachy for that program.
i tried using "ps -C program -l --forest" and unable to see the tree structure.
need... (1 Reply)
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4. OS X (Apple)
Can anyone tell me were to download unix software for Mac OS X (10 Replies)
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5. OS X (Apple)
I'm quite interested in resusing an old bondi iMac i have as a unix box, and i was wondering what distro people would recomend.
I had thought of using BSD/FreeBSD cos thats what osx is based on. I'm doing this as a teaching excercise (for myself) so i'm looking for something achievable rather than... (9 Replies)
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6. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
Are the Terminal commands used in Mac OS 10.1.3 the same as those found on a real Unix system? if they are, what book would you recommend as a terminal refferance guide?
I already have 'The Missing Manual' by O'Reilly, but there ain't much in terms of managing the system via the terminal :(
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Discussion started by: LAdesign
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7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Simple Q here.
What GOOD telnet programs are out there for MAC.
I use this one that can't utilize the VI editor.
I don't know why.
Thankx for your help in advance.
/D (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: DIEZEL
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Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem(3pm)
NAME
Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem - File object used internally by Net::Hotline::Client
SYNOPSIS
use Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem;
$file = new Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem;
$file->name("smile");
$file->comments("A happy file.");
...
DESCRIPTION
Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem is a simple class for storing and retrieving file information, You should never have to create your own
Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem objects when using Net::Hotline::Client. Getting and (to a lesser extent) setting attributes is all that should
be necessary.
CONSTRUCTION
new Creates a new Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem object with all attributes set to undef.
METHODS
All the Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem methods are simple attribute get/set routines. If given an argument, they set an attribute. In all
cases, they return the current value of the attribute.
comment TEXT
The file comments (as seen in the Mac OS Finder).
ctime NUM
The creation time of the file, given as a Mac OS native time value. Add the constant Net::Hotline::Constants::HTLC_MACOS_TO_UNIX_TIME
to it to change it to seconds since the Unix epoch.
creator TEXT
The file creator, given as a four-letter Mac OS creator code ("TTXT", "SIT!", etc.)
name TEXT
The file name.
icon
The file icon given as a four-letter code.
mtime NUM
The modification time of the file, given as a Mac OS native time value. Add the constant
Net::Hotline::Constants::HTLC_MACOS_TO_UNIX_TIME to it to change it to seconds since the Unix epoch.
ctime NUM
The creation time of the file, given as a Mac OS native time value. Add the constant Net::Hotline::Constants::HTLC_MACOS_TO_UNIX_TIME
to it to change it to seconds since the Unix epoch.
size NUM
The size of the file in bytes.
type TEXT
The file type, given as a four-letter Mac OS type code ("TEXT", "PICT", etc.), Net::Hotline::Constants::HTLC_INFO_FOLDER_TYPE for
folders, and Net::Hotline::Constants::HTLC_INFO_FALIAS_TYPE for folder aliases.
AUTHOR
John C. Siracusa (siracusa@mindspring.com)
COPYRIGHT
Copyright(c) 1999 by John Siracusa. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.10.1 2002-11-27 Net::Hotline::FileInfoItem(3pm)