I strongly urge the easy addition of ZIP archive generation to XYplorer.
--Bob Harris
Yes, it has been...many many times...and if you've seen my reply in your other thread, I can maybe point you to some ideas...(oh, and apology accepted!Harris2508 wrote:Perhaps this has been covered; I apologize if that's the case.
Please pardon my lack of a timely reply, I've been away from my PC for the last few days. I'm using, on this PC, Win-7 64bit Professional. But I'm intrigued by your suggestion. Are you doing this from within XYplorer? Does it actually make an archive, or are you using this method to assemble the files for later archiving my another utility?zer0 wrote:If you have Win XP+, select your files, right-click on them, Send To --> Compressed (zipped) folder. Job done
I am doing it from within XYplorer. I use the shell context menu on a collection of items and the rest is as described above. It does make an archive. Said archive doesn't feature extras like password protection, encryption and variable levels of compression, but it's an archiveHarris2508 wrote:Are you doing this from within XYplorer? Does it actually make an archive, or are you using this method to assemble the files for later archiving my another utility?
Well, I must say that this little trick has escaped me all these years! I see that it's an intrinsic part of Windows that I've never actually tried before. Thank you very much for pointing this out. I would say that for 99% of the zip files I need to create this will work just fine.zer0 wrote:I am doing it from within XYplorer. I use the shell context menu on a collection of items and the rest is as described above. It does make an archive. Said archive doesn't feature extras like password protection, encryption and variable levels of compression, but it's an archiveHarris2508 wrote:Are you doing this from within XYplorer? Does it actually make an archive, or are you using this method to assemble the files for later archiving my another utility?
FYIadmin wrote:It's actually an interesting thing: the files are "sent to" a 0 byte item called "C:\WINDOWS\system32\config\systemprofile\SendTo\ZIP-komprimierten Ordner.ZFSendToTarget" (german locale). There should be ways to exploit this functionality in other ways --- maybe a CTB is possible. No time to try this though...
Thanks, but who is "they"?Stefan wrote:FYIadmin wrote:It's actually an interesting thing: the files are "sent to" a 0 byte item called "C:\WINDOWS\system32\config\systemprofile\SendTo\ZIP-komprimierten Ordner.ZFSendToTarget" (german locale). There should be ways to exploit this functionality in other ways --- maybe a CTB is possible. No time to try this though...
It seams to be the zipfldr.dll is involved, but no one could handle to use this info on command line.
They tried without success:
opening the compressed folder view (explorer):
rundll32.exe zipfldr.dll,RouteTheCall [Zipfile].zip
rundll32.exe zipfldr.dll,<entrypoint> <arguments>
rundll32.exe zipfldr.dll,RouteTheCall c:\zipthesefiles