can't add to tar archive using drag and drop in same panel
Moderators: Hacker, petermad, Stefan2, white
can't add to tar archive using drag and drop in same panel
(i don't know if this belongs here as tc6.54 behaves the same way. if it doesn't sorry. feel free to move the thread.)
steps to reproduce:
1) enter a directory with couple of files. see that the same dir is in the other panel as well.
2) select three or four files and zip them to the same directory (no need to delete on pack)
3) select three or four files and tar them to the same directory
4) select one or more files and use mouse to drag them (don't drop!) over the zip archive in the same dir. you get a visual indication that commander is ready to add the files into the archive.
5) move the files (which you are still holding) over the tar archive. commander refuses to add them inside...
tv7rc5 (tc6 also) on winxpsp1
is see no use for a screenshot, but if you want it, il make one
tar archive is fine; if i send it to other panel, i can add files normally.
same goes for gz. other formats are fine. strangely, bz2 also allows me to drag files onto it, which is good as it allows me to overwrite the file within.
steps to reproduce:
1) enter a directory with couple of files. see that the same dir is in the other panel as well.
2) select three or four files and zip them to the same directory (no need to delete on pack)
3) select three or four files and tar them to the same directory
4) select one or more files and use mouse to drag them (don't drop!) over the zip archive in the same dir. you get a visual indication that commander is ready to add the files into the archive.
5) move the files (which you are still holding) over the tar archive. commander refuses to add them inside...
tv7rc5 (tc6 also) on winxpsp1
is see no use for a screenshot, but if you want it, il make one
tar archive is fine; if i send it to other panel, i can add files normally.
same goes for gz. other formats are fine. strangely, bz2 also allows me to drag files onto it, which is good as it allows me to overwrite the file within.
You means the packing dialog or what?select one or more files and use mouse to drag them (don't drop!) ... you get a visual indication that commander is ready to add the files into the archive.
Can you give a screenshot for this? I can't reproduce.
I can modify TAR archive both via F5 & Shift+F5 and Drag&Drop (either with Shift). Maybe the reason of your error is no enough space on disk with %TEMP% - TC repacking all files when modifying TAR archives.move the files (which you are still holding) over the tar archive. commander refuses to add them inside...
Confirmed (TC7rc5, W2k SP4).
2DrShark:
Here dragging files over the ZIP archive (or RAR, ARJ, UC2, LZH, ACE) shows a box around the target archive name, but not over TAR, TGZ, GZ.
Accordingly dragging a file over a TAR, TGZ, GZ archive calls the "Copy" dialog, instead of the "Pack" dialog, as it should.
2DrShark:
Here dragging files over the ZIP archive (or RAR, ARJ, UC2, LZH, ACE) shows a box around the target archive name, but not over TAR, TGZ, GZ.
Accordingly dragging a file over a TAR, TGZ, GZ archive calls the "Copy" dialog, instead of the "Pack" dialog, as it should.
Who the hell is General Failure, and why is he reading my disk?
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!
Yes, confirmed too.Here dragging files over the ZIP archive (or RAR, ARJ, UC2, LZH, ACE) shows a box around the target archive name, but not over TAR, TGZ, GZ.
Accordingly dragging a file over a TAR, TGZ, GZ archive calls the "Copy" dialog, instead of the "Pack" dialog, as it should.
But note this, from Help, §Working with archives (ZIP, ARJ, LZH, RAR, UC2, CAB, ACE):
... Files with extension .TAR come from the UNIX world - they are usually packed into a GZIP file (ending with .GZ). They can now also be modified with Total Commander...
...Repacking will NOT work to TGZ, GZ and CAB archives!
- ghisler(Author)
- Site Admin
- Posts: 50390
- Joined: 2003-02-04, 09:46 UTC
- Location: Switzerland
- Contact:
I will check that after the release of TC7, thanks.
Author of Total Commander
https://www.ghisler.com
https://www.ghisler.com
Thanks for the info. I would consider the help as outdated here, because when entering the archives you can copy new files into them and overwrite files with new versions (TC7 final).DrShark wrote:Yes, confirmed too.
But note this, from Help, §Working with archives (ZIP, ARJ, LZH, RAR, UC2, CAB, ACE):... Files with extension .TAR come from the UNIX world - they are usually packed into a GZIP file (ending with .GZ). They can now also be modified with Total Commander...
...Repacking will NOT work to TGZ, GZ and CAB archives!
Who the hell is General Failure, and why is he reading my disk?
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!
Fixed in 7.01.
Flint's Homepage: Full TC Russification Package, VirtualDisk, NTFS Links, NoClose Replacer, and other stuff!
Using TC 11.03 / Win10 x64
Using TC 11.03 / Win10 x64
Confirm fixed in 7.01:
- pack dialog for target .tar
- no dialog (no drop target) for target .gz and .tgz
But: The help text is still outdated:
(I couldn't test CAB behaviour here.)
- pack dialog for target .tar
- no dialog (no drop target) for target .gz and .tgz
But: The help text is still outdated:
This is not true anymore. Repacking will also work with at least TGZ and GZ (just tested here - worked), the temp file is deleted after repacking.TOTALCMD.HLP, section 3e (last paragraphs) wrote:Edit files from an archive
To edit a file with the editor of your choice, just press F4. The file is then automatically unpacked and will be repacked into the archive if it was changed with the editor. Repacking will NOT work to TGZ, GZ and CAB archives! Instead, the modified file will not be deleted and remain in the temporary directory.
(I couldn't test CAB behaviour here.)
Who the hell is General Failure, and why is he reading my disk?
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!
-- TC starter menu: Fast yet descriptive command access!