#print WARNING: This course was written for UNIX in 1979, not 1999, and has not yet been updated. Some details may be way out of date! In the basic files course you learned about the "ls" command for listing the names of files in the current directory. You will now learn some of the extra abilities of "ls". UNIX maintains a lot more information about a file than just its name; this extra information includes the size of the file, the date and time it was last changed, the owner, and scattered other miscellany. To see this "long" list of information, use the command "ls -l". (That's an "ell", not a "one".) The "-l" is called an "optional argument", since it may or may not be present. To begin, try just "ls -l", then type "ready". #create junk this is garbage #copyin #user #uncopyin #match ls -l #log #next 0.1b 10