Re: application in a resource fork or data fork
Re: application in a resource fork or data fork
- Subject: Re: application in a resource fork or data fork
- From: Mike Cohen <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2002 10:34:15 -0400
If you're planning to run under OS X only (as you should be, since
Mac OS 9 has been officially declared dead), you should be using
Mach-O executables instead of the older CFM format. Mach-O is
basically a standard Unix executable format that doesn't use any
resource fork. Check Apple's developer documentation for bundle
services & Mach-O runtime documentation.
At 4:42 PM +0530 6/27/02, sachin mogam wrote:
Hi,
I am porting a code from windows to a mac. There is a shared library which
contains another executable as a resource. when a third program uses this
library to create a document, it first copies the executable to the new
document and then copies a data so as the newly document act as a executable
itself.
Can we do this on macintosh being two different forks.
What is a bundle concept?
Any help in this regard would be appreciated.
Regards,
Sachin
[demime 0.98b removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef
which had a name of winmail.dat]
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--
[ Mike Cohen |
http://www.macmegasite.com/ ]
[ email@hidden |
http://www.worldbeatplanet.com/ ]
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http://www.mc-development.com/ ]
You can blow out a candle, but you can't blow out a fire. Once the flame
begins to catch, the wind will blow it higher. - Peter Gabriel, "Biko"
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