
On Tue, Dec 09, 2003 at 11:47:05AM -0500, Lennart Sorensen wrote:
That would be DOS 7 (aka win95). No version prior to Win95 (OR if you ran NT) could do long filenames on FAT. I think OS/2 had a way to do it though.
IIRC OS/2 could only do long filenames with HPFS. Your DOS apps could access HPFS files through what looked like a network share, but long filenames would be totally masked. It was suboptimal, but possibly better than allowing two filenames (one explicit, one implicit) for one file. There's a very happy "feature" of VFAT. Create a file "Thisisaverylongfile2.txt". Note that the short version of this comes out as "THISIS~1.TXT". Create a file "Thisisaverylongfile1.txt". Note that the short version of this comes out as "THISIS~2.TXT". Now "del *1.TXT" and watch BOTH FILES DISSAPEAR. Did you really mean to do that? -- taa /*eof*/ -- The Toronto Linux Users Group. Meetings: http://tlug.ss.org TLUG requests: Linux topics, No HTML, wrap text below 80 columns How to UNSUBSCRIBE: http://tlug.ss.org/subscribe.shtml