In this article, we will address the topic of Copy (command), which has been the subject of interest and debate in different areas. Copy (command) is a topic that has captured the attention of specialists and the general public, generating conflicting opinions and deep reflections. Throughout history, Copy (command) has been the subject of study, analysis and controversy, demonstrating its relevance and impact on society. Through this article, we will explore different perspectives on Copy (command), as well as its influence on different aspects of everyday life. It is essential to understand the importance of this issue and its implication in our present reality, which is why it is necessary to approach it from a critical and reflective perspective.
![]() The ReactOS copy command | |
Developer(s) | DEC, Intel, MetaComCo, Heath Company, Zilog, Microware, HP, Microsoft, IBM, DR, TSL, Datalight, Novell, Toshiba |
---|---|
Operating system | RT-11, OS/8, RSX-11, ISIS-II, iRMX 86, TOPS-10, TOPS-20, OpenVMS, TRIPOS, HDOS, DOS, MSX-DOS, FlexOS, 4680 OS, 4690 OS, PC-MOS, Z80-RIO, OS-9, MPE/iX, OS/2, Windows, ReactOS, SymbOS, DexOS |
Type | Command |
License | HDOS: PD MS-DOS: MIT PC-MOS: GPL v3 ReactOS: GPL v2 |
In computing, copy
is a command in various operating systems. The command copies computer files from one directory to another.[1][2]
Generally, the command copies files from one location to another. It is used to make copies of existing files, but can also be used to combine (concatenate) multiple files into target files. The destination defaults to the current working directory. If multiple source files are indicated, the destination must be a directory, or an error will result. The command can copy in text mode or binary mode; in text mode, copy
will stop when it reaches the EOF character; in binary mode, the files will be concatenated in their entirety, ignoring EOF characters.
Files may be copied to devices. For example, copy file con
outputs file to the screen console. Devices themselves may be copied to a destination file, for example, copy con file
takes the text typed into the console and puts it into FILE, stopping when EOF (Ctrl+Z) is typed.
The command is available in DEC RT-11,[3] OS/8,[4] RSX-11,[5] Intel ISIS-II,[6] iRMX 86,[7] DEC TOPS-10,[8] TOPS-20,[9] OpenVMS,[10] MetaComCo TRIPOS,[11] Heath Company HDOS,[12] Zilog Z80-RIO,[13] Microware OS-9,[14] DOS, DR FlexOS,[15] IBM/Toshiba 4690 OS,[16] TSL PC-MOS,[17] HP MPE/iX,[18] IBM OS/2,[19] Microsoft Windows,[20] Datalight ROM-DOS,[21] ReactOS,[22] SymbOS and DexOS.
The copy
command is supported by Tim Paterson's SCP 86-DOS.[23] Under IBM PC DOS/MS-DOS it is available since version 1.[24] A more advanced copy command is called xcopy
.
The equivalent Unix command is cp
, the CP/M command is PIP
.
The command is analogous to the Stratus OpenVOS copy_file
command.[25]
copy letter.txt
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 the type
command. Note that copy page1.txt+page2.txt book.txt
will concatenate the files and output them as book.txt
. Which is just like the cat
command). It can also copy files between different disk drives.
There are two command-line switches to modify the behaviour when concatenating files:
copy /a doc1.txt + doc2.txt doc3.txt copy /a *.txt doc3.txt
copy /b image1.jpg + image2.jpg image3.jpg