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Commodore PC
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172
MS-DOS
User's
Reference
Limitations
on
Comparisons
^
FC
uses
a
large
amount
of
memory
(enough
to
hold
100
lines) as
(
)
buffer
storage
space
to
hold
the
text
files.
If
these
files
are
larger
^-^
than
available
memory,
FC
will
compare
what
it
can
load
into
the
buffer
space.
If
it
doesn't
find
a
match
in
those
portions
of
,
*
the
files
in
the
buffer
space,
FC
stops
and
displays
the
following
\_x
message:
resynch
failed.
Files
are
too
different.
M
For
binary
files
larger
than
available
memory,
FC
compares
both
files
completely,
overlaying
the
portion
in
memory
with
the
next
i
)
portion
from
disk.
All
differences
are
output
in
the
same
manner
as
for
those
files
that
fit
completely
in
memory.
How
to
Use
FC
The
syntax
of
FC
is
as
follows:
For
ascii
comparison
.
fc
[/a] [/c]
[/L]
[/Lb
n]
[/n]
[ft]
[/w][/nnnn]
filename1
filename2
For
binary
comparison
—'
fc
[/b]
\lnnnnn\filenamel
filename2
The
filename
1
option
specifies
the
first
file
or
set
of
files
that
you
want
to
compare,
while
the
filename2
option
specifies
the
second
,
\
file
or
set
of
files
that
you
want
to
compare.
FC
matches
the
first
—'
file
against
the
second
and
reports
any
differences
between
them.
Comparing
text
files
For
example,
to
compare
two
text
files
called
monthly.rep
and
.
\
sales.rep,
you
would
type
the
following
command:
^-^
fc
/a
monthly.rep
sales.rep
If
you
want
to
specify
a
set
of
files,
you
simply
use
a
wildcard
as
part
of
the
filename.
For
example,
if
Pete
and
Betty
both
have
files
called
report.txt,
report2.txt,
and
reporQtxt,
they
might
use
FC
K^J
to
see
if
their
files
are
identical.
They
would
use
the
following
command:
fc
c:\user\pete\report7.txt
\user\betty\report7.txt
^—^

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