http://dotnetdevelopment.pastebin.com/m6ee056a3<http://dotnetdevelopment.pastebin.com/m6ee056a3>Here
you are :).
It is made for my usage, so sorry for hard typing the file locations.

2009/10/20 Cerebrus <[email protected]>

>
> Ah yes, now that you mention it, it does look like that (I didn't
> bother to count the chars). Nevertheless, it might help not to rely on
> a hard coded count.
>
> Notwithstanding the count issue, your suggested logic seems to be the
> synchronous reading of both input files as well as writing to the
> output file (which is a very interesting method)... I hadn't thought
> of that. I'd like to see an elaborated version of your statement,
> please. My version was more akin to reading each file one by one and
> writing in the same sequential manner.
>
> On Oct 20, 9:25 pm, Processor Devil <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Cerebrus,
> > it looks like data are always of the same length...
> > so it should be enough to just read 7 chars from file (aaaaaaa), 7 chars
> > from the other file, write it both to another file and repeat...
> >
>

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