Differences between revisions 36 and 63 (spanning 27 versions)
Revision 36 as of 2009-07-05 21:15:41
Size: 5791
Editor: KaiJaeger
Comment:
Revision 63 as of 2016-09-13 15:27:22
Size: 1957
Editor: KaiJaeger
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
= IniFiles =

{{{I
niFiles}}} is part of the CategoryAplApl project.
= WinZip =
`WinZip` is part of the CategoryAplTree project.
Line 7: Line 6:
|| !WinZip was once a part of the CategoryAplTree project before it was suspended in September 2016.||

The reason is that it does not behave when installed under a modern Windows system: it retires some OS-system DLLs, and it does not even bring them back when un-installed. In other words. it compromises a Windows system. See SevenZip as an alternative.

== Warning ==

Note that WinZip issues an error when you pass something like this with the flag to preserve the directory structure:

{{{
C:\My\folder1\file.txt
C:\My\folder2\file.txt
}}}

According to the company behind !WinZip this is nit a bug but by design. Therefore `WinZip` will issue a DOMAIN ERROR if you have to files with the same name in your list of files to be zipped.
Line 9: Line 23:
INI files are still useful to provide settings to an application. Vista is not going to change this. The class "WinZip" relies on an installed version of [[http://winzip.com/win/en/index.htm |WinZip]] '''and''' the command line extension. If both are installed on your machine then will will have the two executables `WZZIP.EXE` (for zipping) and `WZUNZIP.EXE` (for unzipping) somewhere, typically in C:\Program Files (x86)\WinZip.
Line 11: Line 25:
The Windows API methods provided to read a particular value have an advantage: they follow a clearly defined search path, and following that path they take not only the INI file into account, they also check the Windows registry and the command line parameter. Furthermore, they deliver always up-to-date values. The class makes it very easy to zip as well as unzip stuff.
Line 13: Line 27:
They have disadvantages as well: == Examples ==
Line 15: Line 29:
 * They are slow
 * They return everything as a string

If you are not interested in the Windows registry and command line parameters, and if nobody else is changing your INI files while your application is running, then the "!IniFile" class introduced in this article might attract your attention.

This class allows you to use a kind of APL-Syntax in your INI files. Values not enclosed in quotes will be converted to numbers, everything else gets a string.

== Details ==

=== Character Values ===

An entry like:

{{{HomeFolder='C:/Windows/Appl/'}}}

results in a string holding the path.

=== Numeric Values ===

An entry like:

{{{FormSize=300 400}}}

results in a two-element-vector "!FormSize" holding two integers.

=== References ===

Furthermore, an entry like:

{{{LogFolder='{"HomeFolder}Logsfiles/'}}}

is treated in a special way: the name between the curlies is taken as the name of an already defined value. It is then replaced by the value of that entry.

Note that of course "!HomeFolder" must be specified upfront. Prior to version 1.5, this must be specified within the same section. As a result the same variable needed to be specified more than once if the same path needed to be available in more than one section.

Since version 1.5 this restriction was lifted by the introduction of "local" variables, see there.

=== Local Variables ===

Local values are those specified above the first section. They have only one purpose: to be used as references in several section.

There are some restrictions:

 * They can only be used during the instanciation
 * They must not be nested
 * Although it is possible to specify a numeric value this does not make any sense since numeric values cannot be used as references

== Example ==

=== Creating an Instance ===

After creating an instance from the class:

{{{myIni←⎕New #.IniClass (,⊂'C:/Appl/Example.ini')}}}

=== Accessing Data with the "Get" method ===

you can get all information you are interested in by calling the method "Get". Note that names are '''not''' case sensitive.

Given this file "Example.ini":
Zip all files in C:\!MyFolder\ recursively into myZipFile.zip:
Line 76: Line 31:
[GENERAL]
MaxNoOfErrors=20
FormSize=800 1200
LogfileFlag=1
LogLevels=1 2 3 ; from 1 to 9

[DIR]
Home='C:/mainfolder/'
AppFolder='{Home}appls/'
DocsFolder='{Home}docs/'
LogFileFolder='{Home}Logs/'
 (rc more)←#.WinZip.Create 'C:\MyFolder\*' 'myZipFile.zip'
Line 89: Line 34:
You can get any level of information you are interested in: Zip two files nto myZipFile.zip:
{{{
(rc more)←#.WinZip.Create ('C:\file1' 'C:\file2') 'C:\MyZipFile'
}}}
Line 91: Line 39:
 * get everything
 * get all keys and values of a particular section
 * get a particular value from a particular section

==== Examples with "Get" ====
Unpack C:\!MyZip.zip into C:\!MyUnzippedFiles\:
Line 98: Line 42:
      myIni.Get ⍬ ⍬
 GENERAL
          MAXNOOFERRORS 20
          FORMSIZE 800 1200
          LOGFILEFLAG 1
          LOGLEVELS 1 2 3
 DIR
          HOME C:/mainfolder/
          APPFOLDER C:/mainfolder/appls/
          DOCSFOLDER C:/mainfolder/docs/
          LOGFILEFOLDER C:/mainfolder/Logs/
      myIni.Get'General' ⍬
MAXNOOFERRORS 20
FORMSIZE 800 1200
LOGFILEFLAG 1
LOGLEVELS 1 2 3
      myIni.Get'General' 'FormSize'
800 1200
      ¯1 myIni.Get'General' 'Unknown' ⍝ with default
¯1
      myIni.Get'General' 'Unknown' ⍝ without default
Value Error: "Unknown"
myDoc.Get'General' 'Unknown'
 (rc more)←#.WinZip.Extract 'C:\MyZip.zip' 'C:\MyUnzippedFiles\'
Line 123: Line 45:
=== Indexing ===
Line 125: Line 46:
Since version 1.1, the class provides a default property. That means you can access values by indexing. == Project Page ==
Line 127: Line 48:
Examples (with the same INI file listed above): For bug reports, future enhancements and a full version history see WinZip/ProjectPage
Line 129: Line 50:
{{{
      myIni[⊂'GeneRAL:']
20 800 1200 1 1 2 3
            ⊃myIni[⊂'GeneRAL:FormSize']
800 1200
}}}
== Version Information ==
||Original author: ||KaiJaeger ||
||Responsible: ||KaiJaeger ||
||Email: || kai@aplteam.com ||
Line 136: Line 55:
=== Assigning === <<Include(APLTreeDownloads)>>
Line 138: Line 57:
            myIni[⊂'GeneRAL:FormSize']←⊂12 23

=== The "Put" method ===

            (12 23) myIni.Put 'GeneRAL:FormSize'

=== Nested Entries ===

Since version 1.4 nested values are supported. Imagine an INI file that sets an "AcceptIP" value to a number of IP addresses to be accepted when a client tries to connect to your application. That's how that might look like:

{{{
AcceptID='192.168.68.1,192.168.68.100,195.64.2.2,127.0.0.1,85.86.87.88,156.147.123.1'
}}}

and maybe even much longer. Horrible, and prone to error when that needs to be changed. By initializing the value as an empty vector and then using the ",=" syntax one can overcome the problem:

{{{
AcceptID=''
AcceptID,='192.168.68.1'
AcceptID,='192.168.68.100'
AcceptID,='195.64.2.2'
AcceptID,='127.0.0.1'
AcceptID,='85.86.87.88'
AcceptID,='156.147.123.1'
}}}

This results in a nexted vector of length 6 were each item holds a single IP addres. This works with numbers as well:

{{{
vector=''
vector,=1 2 3
vector,=200 300
}}}

leads to:

{{{
(1 2 3) (200 300)
}}}

=== The "Save" method ===

You can also change a particular value but the changed value will persist only if you execute the "Save" method at some point:

{{{
      myIni[⊂'GeneRAL:FormSize']←⊂'¯1 1000
      myIni.Save
}}}

==== A Warning ====

An INI file is by definition not a kind of database and should '''not''' be used as such.
----
CategoryAplTree

WinZip

WinZip is part of the CategoryAplTree project.

WinZip was once a part of the CategoryAplTree project before it was suspended in September 2016.

The reason is that it does not behave when installed under a modern Windows system: it retires some OS-system DLLs, and it does not even bring them back when un-installed. In other words. it compromises a Windows system. See SevenZip as an alternative.

Warning

Note that WinZip issues an error when you pass something like this with the flag to preserve the directory structure:

C:\My\folder1\file.txt
C:\My\folder2\file.txt

According to the company behind WinZip this is nit a bug but by design. Therefore WinZip will issue a DOMAIN ERROR if you have to files with the same name in your list of files to be zipped.

Overview

The class "WinZip" relies on an installed version of WinZip and the command line extension. If both are installed on your machine then will will have the two executables WZZIP.EXE (for zipping) and WZUNZIP.EXE (for unzipping) somewhere, typically in C:\Program Files (x86)\WinZip.

The class makes it very easy to zip as well as unzip stuff.

Examples

Zip all files in C:\MyFolder\ recursively into myZipFile.zip:

 (rc more)←#.WinZip.Create 'C:\MyFolder\*' 'myZipFile.zip'

Zip two files nto myZipFile.zip:

(rc more)←#.WinZip.Create ('C:\file1' 'C:\file2') 'C:\MyZipFile'

Unpack C:\MyZip.zip into C:\MyUnzippedFiles\:

 (rc more)←#.WinZip.Extract 'C:\MyZip.zip' 'C:\MyUnzippedFiles\'

Project Page

For bug reports, future enhancements and a full version history see WinZip/ProjectPage

Version Information

Original author:

KaiJaeger

Responsible:

KaiJaeger

Email:

kai@aplteam.com


CategoryAplTree

WinZip (last edited 2016-09-13 15:27:22 by KaiJaeger)