Randy

Hi again !
…a 1.4ghz machine with 256m of RAM, 7-Zip quickly climbed to using around 300 megs of RAM and nearly every CPU cycle. …
• It's also dependent of the types and sizes of the files to pack.
* To get a smaller output (packed) file, the largest lexicon as possible must be built and used. That needs complex calculations, hence a high consumption of memory and CPU-use. Such lexicons having large bases for the longest redundant strings as possible are more greedy for all, indeed.
* For instance, whether you have big text-files to pack, let's say : some in French, others in English, and others in the Coco-Islands language

, the packer must build three different lexicons, and use them as and when needed. The same for binary-files when you have several kinds of them.
…I haven't tried it on my workstation (3ghz, 1 gig RAM) but it seemed excessive. …
• Yes, it's excessive. But I'm pretty sure that Ch. Ghisler is quite able to optimize the running of 7-ZIP if used into TC as minimal pack / unpack DLLs or so… Since the interface of TC should be used directly, that'ld save a lot of resources.
* I've a workstation so powerful too : 2-CPU @ 1.65 GHz - 1 GB DD-RAM - XP-Pro (mandatory to manage two CPUs).
* But I bet that such an additional packer could run properly in TC with my old P II @ 350 MHz - 320 MB of SD-RAM - Win 98 SE (Fr.)
- It's my usual PC, I much prefer to work with it, rather than XP and its useless thick layer of make-up

Well, "
Wait & see…", but I'm curious to give a try to such an addon, maybe in the next major-version (6.5, I guess) ?
P.S. France rules!

Kind regards,
Claude
Clo