finding things in unix
Henry B. Castaneda
henryca at comcast.net
Mon Apr 26 15:16:56 PDT 2010
Hi Dennis,
This is totally unrelated, but I have to admit that I am not familiar with
the correct way.
I have a business that runs its orders using filePro on Unix. I am now using
salesforce.com for CRM. How can I export data from filePro to this software
that is web based?
Thanks,
Henry
-----Original Message-----
From: filepro-list-bounces+henryca=comcast.net at lists.celestial.com
[mailto:filepro-list-bounces+henryca=comcast.net at lists.celestial.com] On
Behalf Of Dennis Malen
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 6:00 PM
To: Kenneth Brody
Cc: FilePro Mailing List
Subject: Re: finding things in unix
Yes and it works perfectly.
Dennis Malen
516.479.5912
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kenneth Brody" <kenbrody at spamcop.net>
To: "Dennis Malen" <dmalen at malen.com>
Cc: "FilePro Mailing List" <filepro-list at lists.celestial.com>
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 5:03 PM
Subject: Re: finding things in unix
> On 4/26/2010 4:27 PM, Dennis Malen wrote:
> [...]
>> From: "Jean-Pierre A. Radley" <appl at jpr.com>
> [...]
>>> | Yes, your summary and conclusions drawn are correct. Find is the most
>>> useful
>>> | as it looks in all directories without providing the proper PATH.
>>>
>>> Another of your mis-statements...
>>>
>>> Find does not look "in all directories". It looks under specified
>>> directories.
>>>
>> Correction: I cd / and then find. Looks in all directories. I have always
>> been able to find a file this way.
>
> Exactly what JP said. You specified the root directory on the "find"
> command line.
>
> --
> Kenneth Brody
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