I'm trying to control mutliple Eclipse configurations through SVN. For that purpose I need to know in which files does Eclipse store his configurations. What I could not find, is where are the driver definitions stored (I mean the stuff which is set up at Preferences->Data Management->Connectivity->Driver Definitions). Does anybody know that?
Those are stored at <Workspace>\.metadata\.plugins\org.eclipse.datatools.connectivity.
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I am deploying a Delphi Firemonkey app on Mac OSX and being new to Mac programming I am wondering where I should install the sqlite database file.
Under Windows I usually put it in the application installation directory but this isn't appropriate on a Mac (I think!).
There will not be a need for multi-user access to the db file
I have currently placed it in /Library/Application Support/Myapp/Myapp.db but wonder if there is a better (or official) place to put it.
I'd suggest that you take a look at the guidelines from Apple.
You can use '/Library/Application Support/Myapp/Myapp.db' if the database does not contain user specific data. Otherwise use '~/Library/Application Support/Myapp/Myapp.db'.
Please don't hard code those folders, but use NSFileManager.URLForDirectory for retrieving them.
Nokia PC suite comes with a dll known as phonebrowser.dll which allows users to browse , copy and paste and exchange files between the connected mobile and pc.
I want to know list of functions (especially to copy and paste files) with their parameters that is contained in phonebrowser.dll.
Please help me and thanks in advance...
You can use something like Dependency Walker to find the DLL entry points. But I am not aware of anything that can give you the parameters. Have you tried Nokia's website
I am working with a MATLAB project, and would like to be able to configure variables and paths without re-creating the executable (currently done by using MATLAB's built-in deploytool). I realize I can create a simple text file, listing key=value pairs, and read that in during run-time. There doesn't seem to be any built-in support in MATLAB for creating configuration files that follow a standard format.
Are there any standard existing ways to use configuration files for MATLAB-generated executables?
1) Add your resource to the package in DeployTool in the shared resources part
2) Read by using:
fullfile(ctfroot(),'config.txt');
Edit : That is suitable if your configuration is "private", that is the user should not edit it. In this case it is deployed together with your program as a resource. If you want a "public" config for the users, I know of no better way than to do what you offered.
I've got a "Project" containing a mixed set of files that my application compiles into an installable using InnoSetup. Many of the project files are system or configuration files, and not relevant to the actual install. Therefore, i want to include only the relevant files in an installer. I have a list of them in my application, but no way to inject this information into the template Inno setup script.
What options are available to achieve this?
Regards
Tris
Note: The files are too big to really be copied in a reasonable length of time. :)
sorry for being so late...and then just asking the obvious: why can't you just keep irrelevant files out of the Inno-Script? Do I understand right: you have an app that generates a setup-script for InnoSetup based on a template? Can't you then modify the app? Alternatively, any chance to edit the ISS and remove the irrelevant files?
Cheers
Michael
I've an application, that uses encrypted (txt) files to store data. After investigating the decompiled assembly I concluded that it's a file of some DBMS. So how can find out which DBMS is this application using to store it's data, so that I can attach that file to the correct DBMS.
This is little application and there is no license problem. I can just ask the owner to gimme the data, but just curious to solve this myself.
MORE INFO:
Platform is Windows, and after trying couple of decompilers I concluded that it WAS written in Visual C++. However I couldn't fully decompile this exe, otherwise I just could find out it from the source code.
A couple ideas.
If opening the file in a HEX editor doesn't give you any information (like a magic identifier at the start of the file, which you can pop into google, then:
Use the depends tool from microsoft to grab a list of the DLLs being loaded by the application. Chances are whatever DBMS it's using is contained in an external library.
If the first two suggestions yield nothing, load the executable into IDA pro freeware and have a look at the code which is creating these files.