home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- The following article appeared in the January 16, 1995 issue of Infoworld:
-
- INFOWORLD's WINDOW MANAGER - by BRIAN LIVINGSTON
-
- Change your .INI settings before Windows starts
-
- I announced last week that Tessler's Nifty Tools (TNT), a small software
- company in San Ramon, Calif., has released a utility called WrapUp. This
- program allows you to define a ShutDown group in your shell, much like the
- StartUp group. Any icons you define in your ShutDown group will be executed
- when Windows exits. This allows you to automate procedures such as logging out
- of your network, backing up your files when no other applications are
- running,and I so on.
-
- Combining this shutdown procedure with two other TNT utilities, however, can
- give you even greater control over your Windows configuration.
-
- The first utility is called Config-Controller. This tiny app gives you an
- automated editor for .INI files, or any plain text file. You define a set of
- operations you wish to perform on the text file, then run these operations in
- your AUTOEXEC.BAT file. Although Config-Controller is a DOS program, its main
- purpose is controlling Windows, because Windows configuration files must be
- changed before the graphical environment starts.
-
- One of the most common Windows problems is the dilemma faced by users who need
- two or more configurations. When a PC is used by different office workers -or
- by parents and their children -you often need to change the configuration that
- some of the users see.
-
- In the case of the children using Windows, for example, you might want them to
- see only the Games group in Program Manager, and not the other groups
- containing icons for File Manager, PC Tools, and other powerful programs.
-
- Instead of creating two PROGMAN.INI or WIN.INI files to hold two different
- configurations, a much better method is to use Config-Controller. With two
- sets of .INI files, changes made by the installation routines of new software
- are written to only one set. With Config-Controller, you merely edit in or
- edit out those lines you want to appear or not appear. The simplest way to do
- this is to turn individual lines in an .INI file into comments by adding a
- semicolon (;) as the first character. Among other commands, Config-Controller
- includes COMMENT and UNCOMMENT commands that make this easy.
-
- I last wrote about Config-Controller in my April 11, 1994, column. (See
- "Control Your configuration with these nifty tools," page 30.) But at that
- time, the program was limited by its inability to edit Program Manager group
- (.GRP) files. You could make whole groups appear or disappear in different
- configurations by editing PROGMAN.INI, where these groups are listed by name.
- But since .GRP files are binary files, not text files, you couldn't edit or
- remove individual icons from groups.
-
- Gary Tessler, the author of the TNT set (which now includes more than 30 DOS
- and Windows utilities), has cracked the .GRP code and made it accessible to
- ordinary mortals. He has invented a Group-to-Ini (Grp2Ini) utility, which
- converts .GRP files into text files, like .INI files. A separate utility
- converts them back. This is not an easy feat, because the .GRP format contains
- binary data, which is poorly documented at best.
-
- Converting .GRP files into plain text files, of course, makes them easy to
- edit with Config-Controller. You might want to make certain network icons
- appear only when the network is running, for instance -or any of a number of
- other possibilities.
-