Hi there,
Given the file is of wordperfect from a reliable source, I feel confident
it is fine, having no desire to list the files in the program.
so, I can run
7z t c:\corel\corelw62.7z
and test the archive integrity,
then 7z x c:\corel\corelw62.7z
to extract the file into the corel directory?
thanks much!
On Wed, 1 Nov 2023, Tim Chase wrote:
Tim here. The command-line iterface should speak pretty well. You
can use the "t" command to "test" the archive's integrity
$ 7z t my_archive.7z
or the "l" command to list the files in the archive before extracting
them:
$ 7z l my_archive.7z
Once you know the contents are what you expect, you can use the "x"
command you showed to extract the files:
$ 7z x my_archive.7z
The output is a bit verbose with some copyright info, archive
self-integrity testing, and some stats about the archive. But all
the output should be pretty speakable.
-tim
On 2023-11-01 12:12, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi All,
imagine some here use 7zip to extract files in Linux.
I have an archive of a program that I want to extract, keeping all of the
sub directories in tact.
The file was compressed with 7zip, that I have not used before.
My google suggests something like
7z x file.7z
will do the trick, but wanted to ask as I am unsure how well the program
will speak.
ideas?
Thanks,
Karen
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