World: r3wp
[!REBOL2 Releases] Discuss 2.x releases
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BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1939] | The runtime is /View doing something other than installing itself. And it needs settings, cross-platform settings that are made available inside /View without any script needing to check the registry of call GET-ENV, for scripts to know where to put or look for the stuff they need to run. |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1940x2] | one of the problems of the current R2 is that some of that information is either not known at all or cannot be changed even internally by view. so it assumes (pretty badly) to use the current-dir for some things. |
so we end up with folders being created everywhere on disk, even on your desktop... | |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1942] | Well, I guess you need to refine system/options then. |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1943] | The biggest problem with /View on Windows is that it puts its runtime settings in the wrong place, almost every time. Global stuff in user-specific places, user-specific stuff in global places. |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1944] | I once again assume you mean the viewtop. |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1945x2] | They fixed this a little for the files, but the registry settings are still all wrong. |
No, I mean /View. | |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1947] | and you cannot overide how IT wants to install in cases where you know exactly what YOU want it to do. for rebol it wouldn't be too bad, but for scripts which are more than your little 100 line reblet, this gets VERY annoying real fast. |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1948x3] | What files does /View create? |
And what registry settings does it write? | |
Well, nevermind. | |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1951x2] | File associations. A setting saying which version is installed. A setting saying where the program is installed. |
They make a global install, but save the global settings in the user-specific locations, and the use-specific stuff in global locations. | |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1953] | What would you call a REBOL binary that comes with GUI capabilities on Windows? |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1954x2] | It depends. If it has all of View, with the viewtop, I would call it /View (or /View/Pro with library support). If it has none of that I would call it /Face. If it has all of that plus /Command stuff, I would call it /Command/View. There are 3 graphics builds on Windows, license depending. |
All of them except /Face use the same registry settings, the wrong ones. | |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1956] | On Linux, there's two versions of REBOL immediately available: /Core and /View. /Core is a REBOL binary w/o GUI capabilities, /View is a REBOL binary with GUI capabilities (and beyond that, it comes bundled with a self-installer and the Viewtop app). |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1957] | as a reboler, I don't want to write system specific and environment resolving code. my script should be able to ply itself to whatever system its installed on and still read/write its files in proper OS expected places. This is what we are talking about Andreas... viewtop specifically has nothing to do with this. this is for ALL scripts to be compliant. if I had a command which allowed me to build a system-compliant "application data path" then it would write stuff in ~/application/ on linux and whatever profile/app data/application path is being used by your flavour of windows. right now, I'd have to write a library which determines this and it probably will screw up on ubuntu, or Mac Or the latest windows. |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1958] | Nope, /Face uses the wrong registry settings too, just less of them. |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1959x2] | things like user names and user folders have to be extracted within a routine using proper OS calls, either WinAPi or Env values if that is what your OS uses. |
though Env values are a security risk since they can easily be highjacked. | |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1961] | maxim, i totally understand this. but it's this kind of cross-plattform stuff is a pipe dream in the general case. |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1962] | I have had to build such tools in the past, so no, it can really be done... just look at view itself... it abstracts all of the windowing /event etc into a common layer. |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1963] | And that is stuff the runtime should be doing, so that scripts can be cross-platform. Platform-specific stuff has no business being in scripts, or the mezzanine code for that matter. |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1964] | the only sensible solution is to be mostly platform ignorant and build a rebol-specific packaging and distribution system. which, iirc, you did a few times in R2. |
AdrianS 29-Jun-2010 [1965] | Maxim, see this about passing arguments to apps started by file association: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/444388/how-can-i-pass-command-line-arguments-via-file-association-in-vista-64 Re. shortcuts having arguments, yes they can - Vista shortcuts could as well, though. |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1966x2] | Then the runtime would still need to look stuff up from the platform, and put the answers in nice, cross-platform REBOL settings in system/options, system/user, etc. |
That is the runtime's job, to gloss over all of those pesky platform-specific differences. | |
Andreas 29-Jun-2010 [1968] | Good luck with that :) |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1969] | It's the same job performed by the host code in R3. |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1970] | adrian, when I edited the shortcut on vista, and added the arguments it wouldn't save it, telling me the path to the executable didn't exist :-( |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1971x2] | Works just fine on 7. |
Are you using .lnk format shortcuts? | |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1973x5] | and yes... you have to manually change the command-line arguments, but then the OS' editors break up in what I can't remember, I think rebol disapeared from the "installed applications" list, although the file association still worked. |
I don't have vista installed anymore... but i'd just go on the desktop and right-click, create shortcut. | |
(using XP for as long as I can) | |
cool if it works on win7 | |
is the read-only file property bug fixed in win7 | |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1978] | Depends, which bug? |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1979] | if you try to change the read-only property of files/folders they aren't actually applied, it was listed as a bug on severl IT sits on the net. basically, many applications suddendly coudn't write to folders anymore. I had problems with rebol in SOME paths. I even had issues with xcopy! looking at the files in a shell, they where all listed as read-only and couldn't be set to anything else... (this wasn't within windows folders, but on a data disk, before you ask ;-) |
BrianH 29-Jun-2010 [1980] | Haven't seen that yet. But I almost never use Vista, and rarely XP for that matter now, just 7. |
AdrianS 29-Jun-2010 [1981x2] | I've bumped into the read only bug on Win 7 - pretty annoying. |
not sure it was just a cosmetic thing, because in the end I managed to do whatever it was that I needed to do | |
Graham 29-Jun-2010 [1983x2] | folders are always read only ... |
That doesn't affect how you write to the folder itself | |
AdrianS 29-Jun-2010 [1985x2] | maybe that's what I saw |
but I kept on unchecking the read only prop, applying the change which asked to apply to all children and I said yes, it looked like it was recursing and setting the flags - then I exited the dialog, and upon re-checking, the settings seemed to be the same as before | |
Maxim 29-Jun-2010 [1987] | its not *supposed* to be an issue, but I have had issues where it was. I had read on the net and others where also having write issues on their data disks. it as even flagged at a MS site... buts been a while (like 3 years) so I don't remember all the details of the problem. |
Cyphre 30-Jun-2010 [1988] | Graham: re Linux font paths, that could be better solution than the current state. Though it is still not 'automatic' solution I can imagine that Linux users will be happier with that. I'll try to ask Carl what he thinks about it. |
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