tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post1129757499486912661..comments2024-03-15T20:18:01.139+07:00Comments on SlackBlogs: How to Merge .001 FilesWilly Sudiarto Raharjohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12738382924950315620noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post-14351287712582109172012-05-29T00:37:41.646+07:002012-05-29T00:37:41.646+07:00the fastest and more portable approach is: cat *.a...the fastest and more portable approach is: cat *.avi.* > file.avi<br /><br />however lxsplit seems to handle file integrity much better.<br /><br />Thanks for showing me this tool.MaGhttp://newbieshell.blogspot.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post-67326493266163851012011-07-26T20:54:16.080+07:002011-07-26T20:54:16.080+07:00*".001" files are created by the UNIX &q...*".001" files are created by the UNIX "split" utility, which is 8-bit clean on GNU systems; "cat" (short for concatenate, if you don't know) brings them back together again, for instance:<br /><br />cat file.001 file.002 file.003 > file<br /><br />I use this all the time when I need to split large archives that I need to store on FAT-formatted devices like flash drives. It's by far the easiest way; the catch is that there is obviously no error detection or correction going on, so I already run it back in through "cmp" compare or "md5sum" with the original.<br /><br />MikeMikenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post-5245892082149931382011-07-16T06:15:09.595+07:002011-07-16T06:15:09.595+07:00wah kalo saya bisanya cukup pake perintah cat aja...wah kalo saya bisanya cukup pake perintah cat aja mas... jadi gak perlu instal aplikasi lagi<br /><br />cat file.00* > filef0xyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12840651770359092742noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post-70813094691585738422011-07-16T04:26:57.792+07:002011-07-16T04:26:57.792+07:00I always just used cat:
$ cat filename.{001..nnn}...I always just used cat:<br /><br />$ cat filename.{001..nnn} > filenameJosiahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06037018904258630613noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7534848307469799413.post-58900765663605001012011-07-16T03:12:14.677+07:002011-07-16T03:12:14.677+07:00i don't know the ".001" format but.....i don't know the ".001" format but... i think a simple "cat" should work with some "split formats"Niconoreply@blogger.com