More README updates ...

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Bobbi Webber-Manners 2020-06-03 19:00:04 -04:00
parent 428f7f48e9
commit fee09dba8d
1 changed files with 11 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -126,12 +126,14 @@ The following prompts are presented in order:
insensitive manner.
- `I` - Sort by filename in descending alphabetical order (Z-A) in a case
insensitive manner.
- `d` - Sort in ascending order of modification time/date.
- `D` - Sort in descending order of modification time/date.
- `c` - Sort in ascending order of creation time/date.
- `C` - Sort in descending order of creation time/date.
- `m` - Sort in ascending order of modification time/date.
- `M` - Sort in descending order of modification time/date.
- `t` - Sort in ascending order of file type (considered as an integer)
- `T` - Sort in descending order of file type (considered as an integer)
- `f` - Sort in directories ("folders") to the top.
- `F` - Sort in directories ("folders") to the bottom.
- `d` - Sort in directories to the top.
- `D` - Sort in directories to the bottom.
- `b` - Sort in ascending order of file size in blocks.
- `B` - Sort in descending order of file size in blocks.
- `e` - Sort in ascending order of file size in bytes (ie: EOF position).
@ -164,6 +166,8 @@ The following prompts are presented in order:
![](/Screenshots/BASIC_Launch.png)
_NOTE: COMMAND LINE PARSING IS CURRENTLY CONDITIONALLY COMPILED OUT_
ProDOS 2.5 introduces support for passing command line parameters when
starting a `.SYSTEM` file. If no command line parameters are passed
the the interactive user interface is presented (see previous section.)
@ -207,8 +211,8 @@ sortdir [-s xxx] [-n x] [-rDwvVh] path
C sort by creation date/time descending
t sort by type ascending
T sort by type descending
f sort folders (directories) to top
F sort folders (directories) to bottom
d sort directories to top
D sort directories to bottom
b sort by blocks used ascending
B sort by blocks used descending
e sort by EOF position ascending
@ -220,7 +224,7 @@ sortdir [-s xxx] [-n x] [-rDwvVh] path
y always fix (be careful!)
```
For example `sortdir -rw -snf /foo` will sort the tree rooted at directory
For example `sortdir -rw -snd /foo` will sort the tree rooted at directory
`/foo` first by name (ascending), then sort directories to the top, and will
write the sorted directory to disk.