Hi Mark, I just tried this in a Terminal :
TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ echo "WEWEWEE" > x.txt TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ ls -l x.txt/rsrc -rw-r--r-- 1 tdz staff 0 28 mai 11:08 x.txt/rsrc TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ echo "ASDASDASDDADSASDASDASD" > x.txt/rsrc TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ ls -l x* -rw-r--r--@ 1 tdz staff 8 28 mai 11:09 x.txt TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ ls -l x.txt/rsrc -rw-r--r-- 1 tdz staff 23 28 mai 11:09 x.txt/rsrc TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ cat x.txt/rsrc ASDASDASDDADSASDASDASD TdzMacBook:~ tdz$ cat x.txt WEWEWEE If this is OK for you, you can use the shell() to do your job. HTH. Thierry > Thanks, Scott, but a short delay in the script doesn't make a difference. I > have noticed that I can write the entire resource fork at once using > /path/to/file.ext/rsrc (note the additional /rsrc) but this doesn't let me > set individual resources. > > -- > Best regards, > > Mark Schonewille > > >> Hello Mark, >> >> I use setResource in an application (in several places) and it seems to >> work. I can't see an error in the script you posted. (I haven't ever used >> the "flaglist" feature, though.) >> >> Might giving the OS a short "breather" between creating the file and setting >> the resource, help? >> >> >> Scott Morrow _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
