Soopy Mac OS

Dec 20, 2005 One/two player arcade combat game. You are Snoopy (or the Red Baron). You have to shoot down your opponent, who can be controlled by a friend or the computer. What's new in Snoopy vs. Peanuts Snoopy Tablet & eReader Cases, Covers & Keyboard Folios, Mac Print Master Computer Software, Mac Pro 3 1 Memory, Mac Floppy 3.5's Software, Mac Floppy 3.5's Software, Apple Mac mini Desktops, Mac Webcam, Mac Monitor, Mac Office and Business Software, Wacom Bamboo Fun. The file you submitted didn't even pass a port lint check, much less build the software correctly (at least not for me on a MacBook Pro with Mac OS X 10.4.11, Xcode 2.5 and MacPorts 1.6.0). I consulted Snoopy's Installing on Mac OS X page to make my changes.

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Soopy
I posted this in the Leopard forum, but it appears that I was incorrect in doing that, so...
I am a long time PC user making a valiant effort to move to MAC. I am attempting to find a painless way to update a flash drive with some data that has to move between my office and home machines. There are a lot of files, but only a few change each day, and I have to make sure that an older file never overwrites a newer file with the same name.
On the PC I would simply fire up a command prompt and use the following xcopy command:
'xcopy pathdir1 . pathdir2 /s /h /r /c /d'
This would copy all of the files in dir1 to dir2, including all subdirectories (/s); including all hidden files (/h); including all read-only files (/r); continuing on, rather than erroring out, if a glitch develops (/c); and copying only files that are newer than those already in the target directory where the same file exists in both directories (/d)
I've been told that the 'cp' command is what I want, but a review of the man file does not indicate anything similar to the /d parameter. Apparently some versions of the linux cp command allow a -u parameter, which seems to be similar, but OS X doesn't like that.
I need to make sure that an older file is never copied over a newer file, so the equivalent of the /d parameter is necessary.
What am I missing?
thanks...Bob
Snoopy mac os download

MacBook Pro 2.4 / MacPro 2.66, Mac OS X (10.4.10)

Snoopy Mac Os Catalina

Posted on Jun 5, 2008 1:51 PM