Long Command-Line Examples
The examples in this guide use the convention of a backslash (\) to indicate that a long command line continues on the next line.
The following two commands are equivalent. The first command is too long to fit on a single line, so it is continued on the next line. The second example, which uses short forms for the options, fits on one line.
On UNIX™, the command line might look like:
cdr define server --connect=katmandu --idle=500 \
--ats=/cdrfiles/ats
cdr def ser -c katmandu -i 500 -A /cdrfiles/ats
On Windows™, these command
lines might look like:
cdr define server --connect=honolulu --idle=500 \
--ats=D:\cdrfiles\ats
cdr def ser -c honolulu -i 500 -A D:\cdr\ats
For information on how to manage long lines at your command prompt, check your operating system documentation.