Hey, Charles,

The mac platform conveniently packages applications into a special folder, which looks to the user in the finder like a double-clickable application (with the extension .app), but actually can contain all files and folders pertaining to the project, including all stacks, drivers, help files, etc.

control-click on a mac standalone package in the finder, and you will see a popup menu. Choose "Show Package Contents" and you can drill further into it. All the rev stuff is in the 'Mac OS' directory.

Working with Rev on a Mac is a dream. I can be in the IDE editing 'inside' the standalone, save and at any time launch the same code as a standalone, close, then go back to the IDE. And it all ends up in a perfect, icon'd package.

The standalone package itself never has to be recreated unless there's a change in the launch process, and all the rev 'stuff' is there. All the stacks for your project are inside, in the hierarchy you designed.

You never have any path or inclusion problems that might happen in standalone building because your not building one, and the paths in the standalone and when editing are one and the same.

The biggest 'gotcha' that I can attach to this method is that DATE BASED BACKUPS will NOT WORK with stacks saved inside a package like this. I know the Finder and my backup program (Folderssynchronizer) still thinks my app was last changed on July 6, 2006, when actually stacks are changed often.

After discovering this, I used internal Rev calls inside the app to compress itself and send a copy to a ftp server offsite.

I also wrote a short one to compress each stack in the hierarchy to an individual component of a multi file document using RevZip. ( I love the addition of this to the feature set. )


I would expect Rev on PC would pack everything in the build into a non-editable .exe file and using my method that worked on the Mac above would require an external folder with the editable stacks inside. I think I got that right, but even though I have an Enterprise license, I haven't spent much time on the PC side. My pet PC broke a while ago...so please - a PC Rev person chime in here..


When you have a startup stack (splash screen) and a second stack (your application) made into a standalone, it is common for the first stack to be an application and .exe program respectively for the Mac and Windows and the second stack to remain as a Rev stack? I have encountered this for standalones for the Windows and the Mac platforms. I thought both would be made into one application.


Charles Szasz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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stephen barncard
s a n  f r a n c i s c o
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