- copy (command)
-
In computing,
copy
is a command in RT-11, RSX-11, OpenVMS, DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows operating systems. The command copies computer files from one directory to another. The destination defaults to the current working directory. If more than one source file is indicated, the destination must be a directory. The equivalent Unix command iscp
. A more advanced copy command is calledxcopy
.Example for PC-DOS
copy letter.txt [destination]
Files may be copied to device files (e.g.
copy letter.txt lpt1
sends the file to the printer on lpt1.copy letter.txt con
would output to stdout, like thetype
command. Note thatcopy page1.txt+page2.txt book.txt
will concatenate the files and output them asbook.txt
. Which is just like thecat
command.There are two command-line switches to modify the behaviour when concatenating files:
- Text mode - This copies the text content of the file, stopping when it reaches the EOF character.
copy /a doc1.txt + doc2.txt doc3.txt
- Binary mode - This concatenates files in their entirety, ignoring EOF characters.
copy /b image1.jpg + image2.jpg image3.jpg
See also
- List of DOS commands
- List of Unix programs
- Peripheral Interchange Program
References
Windows command line programs and built-ins (more) File system
(basic)File system
(advanced)Processes Registry User environment Text processing Shell programming Networking Searching Miscellaneous Categories:- MS-DOS/Windows Command Prompt commands
- DOS commands
- Microcomputer software
- Windows administration
- File copy utility
- Storage software stubs
- Microsoft Windows stubs
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