Adam Wells writes:
> You can access the resource fork of any file by appending
> "/..namedfork/rsrc" to its name.
>From /usr/include/sys/paths.h:
* Provides support for system wide forks */
#define _PATH_FORKSPECIFIER"/..namedfork/"
#define _PATH_DATANAME "data"
#define _PATH
At 13:21 -0500 2002.12.05, Sherm Pendley wrote:
>On Thursday, December 5, 2002, at 12:38 PM, Chris Nandor wrote:
>
>> Does anyone know how to open a resource fork, with open(), sysopen(),
>> POSIX::open(), etc.? On Mac OS, I would use O_RSRC, but that is
>> apparently
&g
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherm Pendley) wrote:
> On Thursday, December 5, 2002, at 12:38 PM, Chris Nandor wrote:
>
> > Does anyone know how to open a resource fork, with open(), sysopen(),
> > POSIX::open(), etc.? On Mac OS, I would
At 12:38 -0500 12/5/02, Chris Nandor wrote:
Does anyone know how to open a resource fork, with open(), sysopen(),
POSIX::open(), etc.? On Mac OS, I would use O_RSRC, but that is apparently
not available in Mac OS X's fcntl.h.
You can access the resource fork of any file by appe
On Thursday, December 5, 2002, at 12:38 PM, Chris Nandor wrote:
Does anyone know how to open a resource fork, with open(), sysopen(),
POSIX::open(), etc.? On Mac OS, I would use O_RSRC, but that is
apparently
not available in Mac OS X's fcntl.h.
open("filename/rsrc");
sherm
Does anyone know how to open a resource fork, with open(), sysopen(),
POSIX::open(), etc.? On Mac OS, I would use O_RSRC, but that is apparently
not available in Mac OS X's fcntl.h.
--
Chris Nandor [EMAIL PROTECTED]http://pudge.net/
Open Source Development Ne