Klaus,
The most common compression method(s) I have seen have been a 2-step
method. First the files are compressed into a TAR file, then compressed
even more using GZIP. The file extensions are typically something.tar.gz
or something.tgz when the 2-step method is used.
Roger Eller
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Hi list,
can anyone tell me, what "compression"-format can be handled by Linux? SIT/Stuffit probably not -) ZIP? Or good ol' built-in GZ?
Thanks a lot in advance...
Regards Klaus Major [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.major-k.de
Thanks for the fast answer.
I think i asked the wrong question ;-)
What compression, that can be done on Mac or Win (!), can be read on Linux?
From your reply i see, that GZ is ONE possible way :-)
Is this compatible with the built-in compression of RR? Can the ZIP format be read on Linux, too?
I don't have a Linux machine at hand...
Thanks again...
Regards
Klaus Major [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.major-k.de
_______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
