Yes. I can use a command prompt to spit out a text doc of the folders
contents, I was hoping for something a little nicer looking.
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 9:08 PM, b_s-wilk b1sun...@yahoo.es wrote:
Tree command. DOS. It's been so long.
Can't you use the terminal, or I forget what it's
Yes. I can use a command prompt to spit out a text doc of the folders
contents, I was hoping for something a little nicer looking.
I said sed.
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Perhaps you did, but if you didn't offer a step by step how to export
a tree view folder list from sed to html, then nobody's interested.
I'm not even sure it's *possible*, not to mention the hassles
involved. Be lots easier for the OP to just get one of the shareware
tree view apps.
On Tue, Apr
Perhaps you did, but if you didn't offer a step by step...
Where is you sense of adventure? Step-by-step is is for those whiney MFBs.
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and SED is for *nix I believe.
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 4:28 PM, Tom Piwowar t...@tjpa.com wrote:
Perhaps you did, but if you didn't offer a step by step...
Where is you sense of adventure? Step-by-step is is for those whiney MFBs.
and SED is for *nix I believe.
There is a Windows version and a community that posts pre-written
scripts. Including one that works on directory trees. You would need to
adapt it for Windows format.
sed.sourceforge.net/grabbag/scripts/
Thanks for the advice, Betty, that worked for me.
Mike
On Sun, Apr 26, 2009 at 10:02 PM, b_s-wilk b1sun...@yahoo.es wrote:
I sometimes browse my hard drive from a browser, especially the 'invisible'
system files, like the Samba manual or CUPS, instead of using command line.
On my Mac I can
I can't get this to work in Firefox, IE7, or Opera. All I can see is a
single directory, not a tree view. Or is there a trick I'm missing?
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 1:02 AM, b_s-wilk b1sun...@yahoo.es wrote:
I sometimes browse my hard drive from a browser, especially the 'invisible'
system files,
You are correct, I can't save a tree view so it's not 100% of what I wanted
but I think it will be close enough.
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 10:39 AM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote:
I can't get this to work in Firefox, IE7, or Opera. All I can see is a
single directory, not a tree view. Or is
Mike
Did you do this on a Mac or in Windows? Does it or something similar
work in Windows?
Betty
Thanks for the advice, Betty, that worked for me.
Mike
On Sun, Apr 26, 2009 at 10:02 PM, b_s-wilk b1sun...@yahoo.es wrote:
I sometimes browse my hard drive from a browser, especially the
Win 7, firefox, looks like you said, like an FTP listing. As I said the
only thing I can't seem to do that I can do without is also saving the
'links' of the nested folders. If I save the web page in full and open it
on another machine, it of course does not open the folder links. But the
main
Tree command. DOS. It's been so long.
Can't you use the terminal, or I forget what it's called in Windows
[start menu, somewhere], and bring up the tree, then copy and paste or
save it as a text file? I can do that in the OS X Terminal. Or print screen?
Win 7, firefox, looks like you
I'm looking to convert a folder list on windows into html. I don't know if
this is possible, basically I want to point to a folder/drive and convert
all contents into a tree structured html file. I'm not looking for
interaction..as in I don't want to click on a file in a web browser and have
it
Just *nix AFAIK.
On Sun, Apr 26, 2009 at 12:40 PM, Tom Piwowar t...@tjpa.com wrote:
I'm looking to convert a folder list on windows into html. I don't know
if
this is possible, basically I want to point to a folder/drive and convert
all contents into a tree structured html file. I'm not
Just *nix AFAIK.
Too bad. Maybe you can install one of those on your hardware?
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Well, I can't help with the html part, but there are ways to get a file
with a listing you can edit, and browsers can open text files. Here are
three approaches you could look into:
1. Use the command line to create a file with the output of a suitable
DIR command. The /S option will list
I sometimes browse my hard drive from a browser, especially the
'invisible' system files, like the Samba manual or CUPS, instead of
using command line. On my Mac I can browse my home folders/directory by
using this location, file:///Users/betty/. I drag and drop the folder I
want to view to
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