Could you please make them less wordy. I have to read and read to get the answer. Could you just say mostly yes or no and then briefly delineate. Unfortunately answers are rarely just yes or no, and require explanation so that individuals can take the actions most appropriate to their situation. I get that some one may like a short and sweet answer; but the reality is, I am sure there are many of us who appreciate the explanations.
It helps fill in the blanks for what is or may be happening. Now, What about windows set up files. Are there parts of windows that can be archived the same way? Are there other setup files on a machine that might be archived as well. Keeping a machine organized seems really overwhelming sometimes.
I remember my first computer loading dos up and then loading the program you would use, one at a time… No windows to switch programs with, at least not until Atari came out with a better unit and hard drives…. I guess what the original poster is asking for is a tl;tr geek speak for Too Long To Read — a short summary. Leo, Thanks for answering this question, particularly because I was who asked it.
In fact, Leo, on the fifth birthday of my workhorse Studio, I owe you the biggest thanks of all that my favorite electronic child is still thriving. I am a walking, talking recent example of why those install files are so precious. Among my reinstalls were Quicken 99 and Acrobat Pro 8.
Both products are deprecated and no longer supported. The vendors, after all, have a vested interest in getting us to abandon our oldies but goodies. I will soon have to scrub or nuke my Windoze 7 instalation because of it. Also, is this the one that fills all available memory space with instances of COM Surrogate? Is it not the case that sometimes the installation files are also the uninstall files? This is true. When you move all files from a achive, an empty archive remains, like if you move all files from a folder, an empty folder remains.
You can then delete the empty archive by three clicks. That's why I'm no real friend of automated deleting. And to be honest: regarding that feature, I always backed Igor to stand tall. Then don't press the Shift key while you are draging the files but always press the Ctrl key. And never click "Move" or press "F6". I have been using automatic deletion after successful exctraction since two years, and I can tell you one thing: it's awesome. It has an option to extract the archive in a folder if there are more than 1 item at root: so it always behave exactly like myself, but it just takes less time!
When I have 20 archives in a folder and I don't know what's inside it, it takes me 10 minutes to go through it. What a waste of time!! Another software to use that feature is Sabnzbd through winrar. There are millions of people using that feature and just loving it.
I wished there were a program as convenient as The unarchiver on Windows. Just what I was looking for several years. Is it going to be included in the official mainstream version? Deletion-after-extraction would be very time-saving feature for me too. For example, WinRAR also providing an option of asking user after extraction whether he want to delete the unpacked archive or not. Very useful for me, can't switch to 7-zip just because of that.
I archived a file and selected option to delete, however it's only deleting files not folder. I make sure the file unzipped correctly and then I put it in the recycle bin. Once I'm sure everything is good, I clean out my recycling bin every few days. Yes i do delete them. I have never extracting files if its not needed for setup..
IO rather open it from the arcive into memory and make setup After I verify the contents of the zip file to ensure the files work perfectly for those people who think that it's ridiculous because the same bad file would be in the zip file, I'm not sure if they can ever be corrupted from extraction, but I make sure just in case , I delete the file.
With the code below, I get the following exception: Exception thrown: 'System. IOException' in mscorlib. OpenRead String path at ZipFiles. Finish ; oStream. WriteLine ex. Diagnostics; using System. IO; using System. Linq; using ICSharpCode. Core; using ICSharpCode.
Thread starter Elliah Start date Jul 3, Status Not open for further replies. If you installed them you can delete but it wouldn't hurt to have them tucked away if you ever need to reformat. I'm sort of a pack rat, and I save the. Not better or worse, just my preference. There might be a limited time span a few years after which they just disappear Then again, there are many sites such as DriverGuide.
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