On Fri, 18 Feb 2005, [ISO-8859-1] "Jens Rösner" wrote:
} Hi Vince!
}
} > I did give -X"*backup" a try, and
} > it too didn't work for me. :(
}
} Does the -X"dir" work for you at all?
} If not, there might be a problem with MacOS.
} I hope one of the more knowledgeable people here
} can help you
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005, [ISO-8859-1] "Jens Rösner" wrote:
Hi Jens,
} Would -X"*backup" be OK for you?
It depends on how the trailing wildcard is used - the actual name of the
directories is ".backup", but they are in each directory [and yes, there
is html in each page which refers to them, which
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005, [ISO-8859-1] "Jens Rösner" wrote:
Hi Jens!
} > tip or two with regards to using -X?
} I'll try!
Thanks - I do appreciate it!
} > wget -r --exclude-directories='*.backup*' --no-parent \
} > http://example.com/dir/stuff/
} Well, I am using wget under Windows and there, you h
I hate to do this, but I am still stumped by this. Can anyone pass along a
tip or two with regards to using -X?
Thanks,
/vjl/
[repost follows]:
Hi all,
I'm using GNU Wget 1.9.1 under Mac OS X, and I'm trying to confirm that I have
the correct syntax for using the -X [or --exclude-directories] ar
Hi all,
I'm using GNU Wget 1.9.1 under Mac OS X, and I'm trying to confirm that I
have the correct syntax for using the -X [or --exclude-directories]
argument.
For example, I have a URL which I would like to wget with a -r. The URL
contains many directories that are named, ".backup". I do not w