Lutger wrote:
> Bernard Helyer wrote:
>
>> On 12/03/10 18:09, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
>>> "Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
>>> news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
>>>
>>> What I really want is an archive program that automatically makes a
>>> subfolder by default *but* detects if the top level
Bernard Helyer wrote:
> On 12/03/10 18:09, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
>> "Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
>> news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
>>
>> What I really want is an archive program that automatically makes a
>> subfolder by default *but* detects if the top level inside the archive
>> c
On 03/11/2010 11:09 PM, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
"Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
I suppose the name isn't so important, but I really hate zip files whose
contents aren't contained inside a single directory.
This is a bit of a "vim vs emacs" or "static v
On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 9:09 PM, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
> What I really want is an archive program that automatically makes a
> subfolder by default *but* detects if the top level inside the archive
> contains nothing more than a single folder and intelligently *not* create a
> new folder in that
On 12/03/10 18:09, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
"Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
What I really want is an archive program that automatically makes a
subfolder by default *but* detects if the top level inside the archive
contains nothing more than a single folde
Nick Sabalausky wrote:
"Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
I suppose the name isn't so important, but I really hate zip files whose
contents aren't contained inside a single directory.
This is a bit of a "vim vs emacs" or "static vs dynamic" sort of issue.
"Ellery Newcomer" wrote in message
news:hnc4o3$2lm...@digitalmars.com...
>
> I suppose the name isn't so important, but I really hate zip files whose
> contents aren't contained inside a single directory.
This is a bit of a "vim vs emacs" or "static vs dynamic" sort of issue.
Most of the archi