unzipping and even zipping.

  • Thread starter Thread starter mm
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M

mm

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For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.



Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

explorer).



Yet I never hear people reminded anymore to get a zip utility, or any

reference to what's good or where to get it.



The Help has one reference to zipping a folder, but not a file, and no

relevant reference to unzipping.
 
Spend some time reading this. And, learn how to Google.



http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/infopath-help/zip-or-unzip-a-file-HA001127690.aspx?redir=0



"mm" wrote in message

news:ip541657eepdtobveloqfl2hi6lu86eevi@4ax.com...

: For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

: an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

:

: Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

: except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

: explorer).

:

: Yet I never hear people reminded anymore to get a zip utility, or any

: reference to what's good or where to get it.

:

: The Help has one reference to zipping a folder, but not a file, and no

: relevant reference to unzipping.
 
mm said this on 6/11/2010 8:18 AM:

> For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

> an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>

> Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

> except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

> explorer).

>

> Yet I never hear people reminded anymore to get a zip utility, or any

> reference to what's good or where to get it.

>

> The Help has one reference to zipping a folder, but not a file, and no

> relevant reference to unzipping.




Zip/Unzip are a feature of XP Sp3, at least. Not sure it was in the

Gold (original) version or not, but it's been there forever in my

opinion. XP treats a zip file just like a folder. Double click on it

and it opens like a folder and the contents are browsed just like a

folder. If you click on a file however you are basically extracting

it. I don't use that, I use winrar. Once you install a zip or rar

etc utility it bypasses or supersedes XP's zip.



7zip is a free utility if you're having issues.

http://www.7-zip.org/
 
Windows calls Zip files Folders. You simply double click them and they open.



mm wrote:



> For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

> an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>

> Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

> except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

> explorer).

>

> Yet I never hear people reminded anymore to get a zip utility, or any

> reference to what's good or where to get it.

>

> The Help has one reference to zipping a folder, but not a file, and no

> relevant reference to unzipping.
 
mm wrote:



>For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

>an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>

>Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

>except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

>explorer).




XP has builtin support for zipped files. They show up in Windows

Explorer as directories. You can create a new one by right-clicking on

the folder you want to create it in, choosing New|Compressed

Directory. (Approximate, because my machine has WinZip installed, and

it overrides SP's default handling of zips.)



--

Tim Slattery

Slattery_T@bls.gov

http://members.cox.net/slatteryt
 
On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 08:56:30 -0400, Tim Slattery

wrote:



>mm wrote:

>

>>For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

>>an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>>

>>Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

>>except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

>>explorer).


>

>XP has builtin support for zipped files. They show up in Windows

>Explorer as directories. You can create a new one by right-clicking on

>the folder you want to create it in, choosing New|Compressed

>Directory. (Approximate, because my machine has WinZip installed, and

>it overrides SP's default handling of zips.)




Thanks to all of you for your help. I would never have guessed this

from the Windows Help. I'll have to go back and read it again; maybe

I'll learn how to understand MicroSpeak.
 
: Thanks to all of you for your help. I would never have guessed this

: from the Windows Help. I'll have to go back and read it again; maybe

: I'll learn how to understand MicroSpeak.



Google is your friend.

:
 
I too have WinZip installed, mainly because of all the other formats that

WinZip can handle, whereas Windows only handles [.zip] files.



I also have WinRAR installed for the same reason (WinZip doesn't handle RAR

archives).



But I am careful to "uncheck" the box marked "ZIP" on the files that the

application handles in it's installation process (and also "CAB" as well,

as I prefer Windows built-in support (cabview) over WinZip's / WinRAR's).



If you have installed a third-party archiver application, and would like to

go back to Windows handling of [.zip] files, then open the utility you are

currently using and in it's "Settings" options for what file-types it

handles - "uncheck" the box for "ZIP" files.



Then type the following into the "Run" box on the start menu :



regsvr32.exe C:\WINDOWS\system32\zipfldr.dll





...and you can begin again to use Window's excellent ZIP folder

functionality.



Plus, you will still be able to open / create ZIP files with WinZip /WinRAR

/ other archiver.



==



Cheers, Tim Meddick, Peckham, London. :-)









"Tim Slattery" wrote in message

news:cfc416p3m55kvlqe984clrlbe7k66bf026@4ax.com...

> mm wrote:

>

>>For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

>>an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>>

>>Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

>>except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

>>explorer).


>

> XP has builtin support for zipped files. They show up in Windows

> Explorer as directories. You can create a new one by right-clicking on

> the folder you want to create it in, choosing New|Compressed

> Directory. (Approximate, because my machine has WinZip installed, and

> it overrides SP's default handling of zips.)

>

> --

> Tim Slattery

> Slattery_T@bls.gov

> http://members.cox.net/slatteryt
 
On 6/11/2010 2:47 PM, Tim Meddick wrote:

> I too have WinZip installed, mainly because of all the other formats

> that WinZip can handle, whereas Windows only handles [.zip] files.

>

> I also have WinRAR installed for the same reason (WinZip doesn't handle

> RAR archives).

>

> But I am careful to "uncheck" the box marked "ZIP" on the files that the

> application handles in it's installation process (and also "CAB" as

> well, as I prefer Windows built-in support (cabview) over WinZip's /

> WinRAR's).

>

> If you have installed a third-party archiver application, and would like

> to go back to Windows handling of [.zip] files, then open the utility

> you are currently using and in it's "Settings" options for what

> file-types it handles - "uncheck" the box for "ZIP" files.

>

> Then type the following into the "Run" box on the start menu :

>

> regsvr32.exe C:\WINDOWS\system32\zipfldr.dll

>

>

> ..and you can begin again to use Window's excellent ZIP folder

> functionality.

>

> Plus, you will still be able to open / create ZIP files with WinZip

> /WinRAR / other archiver.

>

> ==

>

> Cheers, Tim Meddick, Peckham, London. :-)

>

>

>

>

> "Tim Slattery" wrote in message

> news:cfc416p3m55kvlqe984clrlbe7k66bf026@4ax.com...

>> mm wrote:

>>

>>> For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

>>> an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>>>

>>> Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

>>> except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

>>> explorer).


>>

>> XP has builtin support for zipped files. They show up in Windows

>> Explorer as directories. You can create a new one by right-clicking on

>> the folder you want to create it in, choosing New|Compressed

>> Directory. (Approximate, because my machine has WinZip installed, and

>> it overrides SP's default handling of zips.)

>>

>> --

>> Tim Slattery

>> Slattery_T@bls.gov

>> http://members.cox.net/slatteryt


>




I like IZArc, it supports dozens of compression types, has a great

intuitive GUI, and it's freeware. If you want to give it a try uninstall

Winzip and WinRAR and then install IZarc, let it associate the default

compressed file types that it suggests, and you won't have any more

trouble understanding what files exist within a zip file, which is not a

folder to my way of thinking - this confused me too when I first saw it.

I don't know what they were thinking, I like handling files manually,

calling a file a folder is just unnecessary confusion in my book.



Mike
 
mm wrote:

> On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 08:56:30 -0400, Tim Slattery

> wrote:

>

>> mm wrote:

>>

>>> For unzipping, I've used PKZip or MSZip or PowerDesk (which includes

>>> an unzipper) but my young friend's laptop has none of these.

>>>

>>> Does XP include an unzipper? I can't find one in Windows Explorer,

>>> except references to PowerDesk (a separate enhanced verions of win

>>> explorer).


>> XP has builtin support for zipped files. They show up in Windows

>> Explorer as directories. You can create a new one by right-clicking on

>> the folder you want to create it in, choosing New|Compressed

>> Directory. (Approximate, because my machine has WinZip installed, and

>> it overrides SP's default handling of zips.)


>

> Thanks to all of you for your help. I would never have guessed this

> from the Windows Help. I'll have to go back and read it again; maybe

> I'll learn how to understand MicroSpeak.

>






-------



Do yourself a favour and go fetch WinRar from the link BigAl gave you;

your right-click context menu will have lots of options after you have

installed WinRar. (ps, you'll soon get the hang of it.)



Ed
 

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