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Date: | Mon, 20 Mar 2006 15:26:56 +0900 |
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On Mar 20, 2006, at 10:25, Nobumi Iyanaga wrote:
> And this created a zip file named "man_viewer.zip"; double-clicking
> on it (in another folder), it created "man_viewer.app", but it had
> only a generic application icon (the original "man_viewer.app" is
> an AppleScript application); double-clicking on it, it did
> nothing..., and it is not an application bundle. I guess it is
> this "bundle" format which is the cause of this problem. Could you
> show me how I would be able to zip an application?
The "bundle" is a directory tree. Try using the -r switch:
zip -r man_viewer man_viewer.app
> On the other hand, I don't understand how to use "-x" option with "-
> r" option. For example, I would like to zip recursively a folder
> named "images", excluding ".DS_Store" files. I tried:
> zip -r images images -x \.*
> or
> zip -r images images -x \.DS_Store
The pattern match used for -x includes the path, so try:
zip -r images images -x "*/.*"
or
zip -r images images -x \*.DS_Store
(Also note that the backslash is one of the ways of escaping the '*'
from the shell's expansion. It is not necessary to escape the '.')
--
Jim Tittsler http://www.OnJapan.net/ GPG: 0x01159DB6
Python Starship http://Starship.Python.net/
Ringo MUG Tokyo http://www.ringo.net/rss.html
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