home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
PC World Komputer 1998 May
/
Pcwk5b98.iso
/
Forum
/
Spis250
/
QAZ.NFO
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-11-11
|
6KB
|
139 lines
QAZ v3.54a
by Robert Rothenburg Walking-Owl
Copyright (c)1993,1994 All Rights Reserved
A
No-Frills
User's Guide
and Manual
"No archiver too obscure... almost"
(1) License and Distribution
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Individuals and institutions have the right to use this software freely
so long as it is neither modified nor distributed for profit.
If you want to include QAZ as part of a shareware or commercial package,
please contact me at the postal address below.
(2) Contacting the Author
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Although no registration is required (as the author is unsure of a per-
manent address for the next couple of years) voluntary donations are
accepted. Preferrably a post-card or e-mail if nothing else.
The author (myself) can be reached at:
(electronic) robert.rothenburg@asb.com
rrothenb.ic.sunysb.edu
(post) Robert Rothenburg Walking-Owl
P.O. Box 1327
South Stony Brook, NY 11790 USA
If you have any suggestions or bug-reports, please let me know.
If you have any questions about the utilities supported by QAZ (such
as where to get copies?, or what is this utility?) please ask around
on various e-networks or local BBS systems first.
(3) Legal Miscellanea
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Being free, the author makes no guarantees or warrantees as to the use,
misuse or abuse of this software. The author shall not be held respon-
sible for damage to (or improvement of) data, time, finance, ideologies
et cetera in association with the use of this program (QAZ).
The author also makes no gurantees that QAZ will correctly identify and
handle everything (it's impossible). However, much effort and time has
been put into making QAZ as complete and powerful as possible.
Users of this utility take all responsibility for the licensing requir-
ements of associated software(s) used in conjunction with QAZ.
The various archive formats and utilities, as well as operating systems
and other softwares are the respected trademarks or copyrights of the
various people and-or corporations that own whatever rights there are to
their respective products, etc.
QAZ being free software, its author is under no obligation to provide
support, and may change various aspects of this software from version
to version.
(4) What is QAZ?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
"QAZ" stands for Q-A-Z, the leftmost three keys on a standard American
QWERTY-style keyboard (I couldn't think up a better name for it at the
time).
QAZ is an "almost universal archive viewer". It will recognize, if not
view, most compressed- or archive(r)-file formats, specifically in the
DOS platform, although other types (from the Amiga, Macintosh and Unix)
are recognized as well. (See the file WHICHARC.TXT for more details.)
QAZ is also capable of searching a drive for archives which contain a
specified set of files, or of returning exit codes identifying the file
type or attributes of the file (such as whether an archive contains AV
information or password-protected files) which can be used by other
software.
The output of QAZ is to standard-output, which means it can be used as
an online BBS viewing utility. The format of the listing is very cust-
omizable to suit users' individual tastes.
Note that the default date and time format settings should conform to
the DOS defaults on users' native systems, unless reconfigured by the
user.
(5) General Usage:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
If you run QAZ with no options (or with the -H option), you should get
the on-line help screen, which gives the general syntax of the options
along with a few examples.
QAZ can be run in "vanilla" mode with no options: QAZ filename (as an
example, QAZ FOOBAR.LZH. QAZ will also accept wildcards, and given the
options, can even span an entire disk searching for archives which con-
tain specified files (by names, dates or sizes). QAZ can even apply the
search-specs to files not in archives.
(6) File-Specifications:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
QAZ handles filespecs differently for versions 3.41ß and later. Some of
the special variants used by QAZ are no longer supported: they have not
been "documented" in QAZ since v2 as I have been meaning to change them
for a while.
QAZ accepts the DOS standard wildcard characters ('*' and '?') although
the "undocumented" DOS wildcards are no longer supported. However, the
asterisk ('*') need not be limited to the last character of a field: a
filespec such as "*READ*" is acceptable: this gives QAZ more flexibility
when handling filenames from non-DOS formats (Unix, Mac or Amiga).
Sets are also supported to a limited degree: "[abce]" is valid, although
"[a-e]" (ie, set-ranges) is not valid for this version of QAZ. Not-sets
are also no longer supported.
QAZ does accept "not-specs" however: "^*.TXT" refers to all files but
"*.TXT" files.
Filespecs may be given in quotes, should you need to include spaces
for Macintosh filenames. The filespecs are not case-sensitive.
The advantage of these changes is that QAZ now runs much faster for
searches.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
For detailed information on revision-history or which file-formats QAZ
can recognize, check the WHATSNEW.TXT and WHICHARC.TXT files included
in the release, respectively.