I'm afraid I can't help you because I simply preview/view all compressed files in 7z.Stef123 wrote:There's got to be a smooth way to handle ZIP, right? Scripting, ini-tweaks, whatever it takes, I don't care. Someone, please???
Cheers,
Filehero
I'm afraid I can't help you because I simply preview/view all compressed files in 7z.Stef123 wrote:There's got to be a smooth way to handle ZIP, right? Scripting, ini-tweaks, whatever it takes, I don't care. Someone, please???
admin wrote:Support for ZIP and RAR is on the road map.
Been there. Seen that. Looked like "Maybe Someday" to me.admin wrote:Support for ZIP and RAR is on the road map.
Don't get me wrong: I love to look at and handle my pictures with XY - just used it today - so it's a pretty good picture handler.admin wrote:Same here. A non-issue for me personally.
Not you, grindax, it's me who feels like an alien. The world where I come from has turned ZIP into a standard folder format. I am not talking a different price range like D-Opus. I am talking every Total- /Free- /Speed- /Podunk- Commander out there in that other universe, including Win itself.grindax wrote:I can't say any of that has ever made me feel like an alien.
No objections. But this handling will put me at the butt end of jokes: "Remember the guy who wanted to optimize our workflow - he recommended to first extract each and every zip with an external tool, then go back into XY, copy the files we need, delete those "temp"-folders again …grindax wrote:I right-click on the archive and choose either 'Extract Here' or 'Extract files...
My opinion exactly. What else is ZIP all about if not handling files and folders? What would you say if a picture viewer doesn't speak GIF? No problem, plenty of interpreters out there, who minds a little detour?PeterH wrote:Don't get me wrong: I love to look at and handle my pictures with XY - just used it today - so it's a pretty good picture handler.
But if I want to organize files out of a zip container ...
Yes - if I want to organize files, even out of a zip, a file manager should help, I think.
But you know: a file is not inside a folder. It's just on HD (or whatever). And the folder structure is nothing but a means to find / access the physical address of the wanted file.Borut wrote:But, just to make it straight, a *.zip or a *.rar is - technically - not a folder. It is a file and there has to exist its "content interpreter" - a WinZip, WinRar, or whatever - to show the compressed content which is inside.
As someone who's been around here for quite a while, and who worked with computers before ZIP files were used, I'd say the reason it's not been done is because with the ever increasing storage capacity for much lower cost, the usage of ZIP and RAR and such has decreased over time and thus becomes less relevant.Stef123 wrote:Let me get this straight: This reason this feature has been parked on the ToDo list for so many years is not because XY already has an equally seamless alternative (as I surmised)? It is a matter of priorities - ZIP ranks low compared to other things, the work-arounds mentioned in this thread are considered sufficient?
I'd wonder why you have so many of them when, for ex, email attachments now allow relatively huge files and as above, the need for them has dimished..matter of fact, I wonder if all the new tablets and such provide handling for compressed files like would have been needed years ago.am not questioning your decisions. You sure have good reasons, backed up by the community. But for my intended purposes, both business and private - this pulls the plug for me. Got way too many ZIPs, both compressed and uncompressed, for easy copy and backup, mail attachments, in-out baskets ... the list is endless.
Agree! I find them a nuisance to deal with and even with my tiny 30GB HDD, have plenty of room without resorting to it...He must have some issues/reasons that I don't have and that may justify it to him but I don't get it.Borut wrote:It is really bad if someone's workflow is so dependent on the native support for compressed file formats.There are sure some very special reasons to use compressed files/folders in a daily workflow as if they ware normal file system folders. No help for this situation in the XYplorer world at the moment, I am afraid.
Right -- it's a FILE and to me, it's sorta like asking a file manager to be able to rename/delete/add sheets to a Excel workbook because those are items within that file.But, just to make it straight, a *.zip or a *.rar is - technically - not a folder. It is a file and there has to exist its "content interpreter" - a WinZip, WinRar, or whatever - to show the compressed content which is inside.
I share the same opinion that IF the ZIP format were a function of the OS itself when originally developed, then maybe but it wasn't...it was a result of PKZIP (AFAIK) program getting popular when all we had were floppy disks and 5MB hard drives and even before that.I guess that the people like grindax, Don and myself are viewing compressed formats primarily as a handy encapsulation possibility for a backup or a data transfer. I know of environments with many people dealing with GBs, if not TBs, of *.rar and *.zip files on a daily bases and no one ever using, wishing to use, asking for, or seeing any advantage in the native support of them in any file explorer. (On the contrary, my personal feeling is that this is actually a potentially dangerous blur of the line between the underlying file system and the applications level.)
This is where the attitude "It is a non-issue" - which I actually share - probably comes from.
Well, to me these aren't workarounds, but a standard way of handling compressed files. Maybe, because I grew up with it.Stef123 wrote: - ZIP ranks low compared to other things, the work-arounds mentioned in this thread are considered sufficient?
So do I, but only inside XY. Elsewhere they're treated as folders, you put their ZIP-subfolders onto your Tabs and proceed as usual, with all your tools at hand.j_c_hallgren wrote:I find them a nuisance to deal with ..
I'm not really trying to defend XY's lack of native ZIP support but the fact remains that a ZIP file is NOT a folder -- it's a specialized format of a compressed file -- and AFAIK, Windows does not have ability to directly access a file within a ZIP when using the open/save dialog and if that can't occur, then Windows agrees it's not truly a folder...Stef123 wrote:But never, not in my wildest nightmares, would it have occured to me that XY can't even get to the point of attaching such a 3rd party-action to ZIP-content. Even Windows itself has finally come around (took them ages though) to treat Zip as what it is - a folder.A folder that you can mail out, a folder that contains subfolders - the warp and woof of file mgmt.
As said before -- many of us have abandoned the use of ZIP now that native storage capacities have eliminated the need for it --I am totally lost at the moment, I feel like an alien on another planet. How for files' sake does everybody here handle it? HOW? It totally beats me.