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Commodore PC
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40
MS-DOS
User's
Reference
ā– 
If
the
second
option
includes
a
drive
name,
ms-dos
copies
the
original
file
to
one
on
the
specified
drive.
For
example,
the
fol
lowing
command
makes
a
copy
of
memo,
doc
on
the
default
,
v
drive,
names
the
copy
letter.doc,
and
places
the
copy
on
the
U
disk
in
drive
B:
copy
memo.doc
b:letter.doc
[)
The
/v
switch
causes
ms-dos
to
verify
that
the
sectors
written
on
the
target
disk
are
recorded
properly.
If
ms-dos
cannot
verify
a
write,
it
displays
an
error
message.
Although
there
are
rarely
recording
errors
when
you
run
copy,
the
/v
switch
lets
you
verify
that
critical
data
has
been
correctly
recorded;
it
also
makes
the
copy
command
run
more
slowly
because
ms-dos
must
check
each
entry
recorded
on
the
disk.
The
/a
or
/b
switch
lets
you
copy
either
ascii
or
binary
files,
respectively.
Each
switch
applies
to
the
filename
preceding
it,
and
to
all
remaining
filenames
in
the
command,
until
copy
encounters
another
/a
or
/b
switch.
i
)
Examples:
When
used
with
a
source
filename:
i)
/a
Causes
the
file
to
be
treated
as
an
ascii
(text)
file.
Data
in
the
file
is
copied
up
to
but
not
including
the
first
,
end-of-file
mark
(in
edlin
this
is
control-z).
The
>—/
remainder
of
the
file
is
not
copied.
/b
Causes
the
entire
file
to
be
copied,
including
any
end-
.
of-file
marks.
w
When
used
with
a
target
filename:
i
)
/a
Causes an
end-of-file
character
to
be
added
as
the
last
character
of
the
file;
for
example:
copy
memo.doc
/a
letter.doc
/b
Does
not
add
an
end-of-file
character;
for
example:
copy
billing.asm
/b
billing2.asm
When
you
are
appending
files
the
default
switch
is
always
/a.
U

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