Even if Jar works, it still present a problem because the Windows user who received the file and has JRE installed, would trigger JRE to run this jar file... So, thanks for the idea but not exactly solution to my problem. :) On Wed, 2007-03-28 at 07:20 -0700, Simon Roberts wrote:
Have you tried jar? That's the archive format that is used by Java programs. There's a command-line tool that comes with the Java developer's kit (and with the runtime). My understanding is that the format is essentially zip, but modified to use Unicode for the directory information.
BTW, if it works (or not) I'd be pleased to hear about this, as I've been teaching this for a dozen years, and haven't been able to test it myself!
HTH Cheers, Simon
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