- Auto action upon change?
- Posted by Vass on November 16th, 2007
Is there anyway I can create an auto action upon the change of content or
status of a folder within windows?
i.e. I know an AT command could shedule a copy to overwrite a folder
ensuring it remains as required but I'd rather have
some means whereby, should a folder content change or its status changes in
any way, then a monitoring peice of software detects
this change and automatically puts it back to its orignal state.
I have found some software on the web but that costs, and I wondered if
there was a way to do this FOC?
TIA
--
Vass
- Posted by why? on November 16th, 2007
On Fri, 16 Nov 2007 10:21:35 -0000, Vass wrote:
<snip>
www.google.com
freeware folder monitor
Results 1 - 10 of about 1,950,000 English pages for
freeware folder monitor
.. (0.19 seconds)
Me
- Posted by Vass on November 16th, 2007
On 16 Nov, 14:48, why? <fgrirp*sgc@VAINY!Qznq.fpvragvfg.pbz> wrote:
BZZZZTT! only half the job, what about returning the folder to its
orignal state?
--
Vass
- Posted by why? on November 16th, 2007
On Fri, 16 Nov 2007 06:58:54 -0800 (PST), Vass wrote:
something thet gets no help and changed to an unmunged address for some
reason.
You know where the unsubscribe button on your usenet reader is.
Me
- Posted by chuckcar on November 16th, 2007
Vass <mark@naldernet.plus.com> wrote in
news:054bc5b6-fa58-4001-9299-6ce214a0c94d@e1g2000hsh.googlegroups.com:
Look. He helped you. Thank him for cripes sake. I *used* to have your
perspective on his posts, but the fact of the matter is with queries
like this, it's too involved (and too likely to be misinterpreted
causing a worse problem) to teach the OP what he needs to know, they
have to do their own reasearch, and he pointed you in the right
direction. Surely you can do the same thing to find out the rest of the
answer or failing that seach technet at microsoft.com (assuming you run
a windows OS) or http://tldp.org if you run *nix.
--
(setq (chuck nil) car(chuck) )
- Posted by why? on November 16th, 2007
On Fri, 16 Nov 2007 13:43:02 -0500, chuckcar wrote:
<grin>
There are a couple of basic freeware monitors, it's the OP job to sort
out which suits best.
Normally I dive straight into something like Perl with File::Monitor and
File::Monitor:
elta but that seems a but advanced for the OP. It does
fit both free and does an action.
Quite right, I am not going to read through all the hits looking for
something that may or may not be suitable. Something I may like or can
write a script for may not do for someone else.
Me
- Posted by chuckcar on November 17th, 2007
why? <fgrirp*sgc@VAINY!Qznq.fpvragvfg.pbz> wrote in
news:ic6sj39ekuk2q43kh0hgp9r32in6rguo1i@4ax.com:
Me too. I'm toying with the idea of on putting NT 4 on my slow computer
(the other three partitions are slackware and it has 95 now as well) and
NT 5 or 2000 on this one. Sorry for the misunderstanding on my part BTW.
--
(setq (chuck nil) car(chuck) )