The Join internal command can be used to join multiple files together into a single larger file. It is mainly used when you have a file that has been split into multiple parts, say for transmission via email.
Command Arguments:
Argument | Type | Possible values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
(no argument) |
- |
- |
Displays the Join Files dialog. All currently selected files will be added to the list; you can re-order this list, remove items from it and add additional items to it from within the dialog. Example: Join |
CONVERT |
/K |
uudecode |
Specifies that joined files should be uudecoded. Example: Join /temp/part1.uuenc.txt /temp/part2.uuenc.txt CONVERT=uudecode TO /temp/original.bin |
|
base64 |
Joined files will be decoded using base64-encoding. |
|
|
text |
Files will be joined as text. Different encoding formats will be normalised to UTF-8. |
|
FROM |
/M |
<filename> … |
Specify the files that will be joined. Remember to enclose each file in quotes if it contains spaces. Example: Join /temp/part1.bin /temp/part2.bin |
HERE |
/S |
(no value) |
Writes the joined file to the source folder instead of the destination. Example: Join HERE |
TO |
/K |
<output file> |
Specifies the name of the joined file. Example: Join part1.bin part2.bin part3.bin TO original.jpg HERE |