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- From: johnl@yang.earlham.edu (John Fiskio-Lasseter)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.sys.mac.comm
- Subject: Re: Uncompressing .hqx, and related questions!
- Message-ID: <1992Sep8.105854.19453@yang.earlham.edu>
- Date: 8 Sep 92 15:58:54 GMT
- References: <oivindi.11@dhhalden.no>
- Organization: Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana
- Lines: 71
-
- In article <oivindi.11@dhhalden.no>, oivindi@dhhalden.no (OIVIND IDSO) writes:
-
- > 1. When I have downloaded a Mac .hqx file from an FTP-site, or for that
- > matter any other compressed Mac-file(s), how do I uncompress it (which
- > software)?
-
- Well, the first thing you have to do is translate it into its Macintosh
- being :-) BinHex is the Macintosh answer to UUDE/ENCODE -- it's a way of
- carrying Mac files across incompatible platforms by translating 8-bit
- files to 7-bit ASCII ones (otherwise, the top bit could be clobbered). So
- the first thing you need is software on your Mac that can translate from
- BinHex. In addition to BinHex 4.0 itself, Stuffit (all types) has the
- capability of translating .hqx files, and so (I think) does Compact Pro.
-
- The resulting file should be either a self-extracting archive, or a
- Stuffit or Compact Pro file.
-
- > 2. I have to download all of my Mac-files from an MS-DOS PC (my schools's!),
- > and I'm not sure how I can use these on my dear Mac. Is it possible to
- > "transform" them with the help of for example AccessPC?
-
- Sure, but there's not much point to it, as far as the translation is
- concerned (but see my comments in the next paragraph). This can be
- accomplished on your PC. A lot of Mac programs have translation filters
- for PC word processor formats, but I've never been satisfied with any of
- them. I think your best bet would be to save copies of your PC files as
- ASCII text. When you get them on your Mac, you'll have lost any special
- formatting, but the body of the text will look like it's supposed too.
- Otherwise you may end up with a lot of garbage characters in with the body
- of your text where the formatting commands used to be. I find it a lot
- more annoying to have SOME of the formatting preserved in translation and
- yet have to scoop out a lot of garbage than to have NONE of the formatting
- preserved yet have completely readable text.
-
- The place where Access PC (or something like it) becomes essential is when
- you need your Mac to read the floppy disk that has all those PC ASCII files.
- I don't know what kind of Mac you have, but it'll have to have a 1.44 Mb
- floppy drive ("Super Drive") or a 5 1/4" floppy if you're going to have a
- chance at this. By the way, if you don't want to spend the bucks on
- Access PC I *THINK* that Apple File Exchange (which should have been
- included with your system software) can do the trick here. Someone
- correct me if I'm wrong about that.
-
- A floppy disk may not be the only means at your disposal, by the way. If
- you can get access to a Mac and a PC that can talk to each other via TOPS
- or someother kind of network, that'll be a lot faster than fooling around
- with floppies.
-
- Or, is there a common machine to which both a Mac and a PC are connected
- and to which you have access? (Most of our Macs and PCs have connections
- to the college VAX/VMS system, for example). If so, you could try
- UPLOADING the files to this machine from the PC and then DOWNLOADING them
- to the Mac. That's a bit kludgy, I realize, but if the first two options
- fail, this might be a possibility for you.
-
- > 3. Does AccessPC convert all kinds of files (I have downloaded STUFFIT! from
- > an FTP-site. Can I use AccessPC to convert it from PC to Mac?)?
-
- I'm not sure I understand this question. You mean you downloaded it to a
- PC?! If so, I hope you used a binary translation format, or the file is
- toast. If you did, Access PC *MIGHT* be able to copy it over to a Mac
- drive. I don't really know about that either way, so lay off the flames
- if I'm wrong here -- but it seems like it should work.
-
- Good luck.
- -- John
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
- |John Howard Eli Fiskio-Lasseter | "Is obair-la\ to\iseachadh" |
- |e-mail: johnl@yang.earlham.edu | ("Beginning is a day's work") |
- | JOHNL@EARLHAM.BITNET | --Gaidhlig Proverb |
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