I've seen in some various IOS games Lua scripts being used for saving user settings, and data. I can't figure out how to do this myself, does anyone know of an open source project or example of how to achieve this?
Are people just re-writing the lua scripts programatically? Or is there some way in Lua to rewrite or save data in a lua script? I'm really confused on how this is achieved with lua. Please help me out!
Are people just re-writing the lua scripts programatically?
Yes, it's really very simple. You store your setting data or whatever in a table. You then write that table to a file using simple Lua code. The file you write is a Lua script that, when executed, returns the table.
So your script looks like this:
return
{
setting = true,
width = 640,
height = 480,
}
The code needed to write such serialization is not difficult to write (so long as you don't have tables referencing themselves, directly or indirectly). There are a variety of implementations of this.
Related
I'm trying to make an application which to manage information about several providers.
Target system is windows and I'll be coding with c++.
The users are not expected to be handy on anything related to computers, so I want to make it as fool-proof as possible. Right now my objective is to distribute only an executable, which should store all the information they introduce in there.
Each user stores information of their own providers, so I don't need the aplication to share the data with other instances. They do upload the information into a preexisting system via csv, but I can handle that easily.
I expect them to introduce new information at least once a month, so I need to update the information embedded. Is that even possible? Making a portable exe and update its information? So far the only portable apps I've seen which allow saving some personification do so by making you drag files along with your exe.
I try to avoid SQL to avoid compatibility problems (for my own applications I use external TXTs and parse the data), but if you people tell me it's the only way, I'll use sql.
I've seen several other questions about embedding files, but it seems all of them are constants. My files need to be updatable
Thanks in advance!
Edit: Thanks everyone for your comments. I've understood that what I want is not worth the problems it'd create. I'll store the data separatedly and make an effort so my coworkers understand what's the difference between an executable and it's data (just like explaining the internet to your grandma's grandma...)
While I wouldn't go as far as to say that it's impossible, it will definitely be neither simple nor pretty nor something anyone should ever recommend doing.
The basic problem is: While your .exe is running, the .exe file is mapped into memory and cannot be modified. Now, one thing you could do is have your .exe, when it's started, create a temporary copy of itself somewhere, start that one, tell the new process where the original image is located (e.g., via commandline arguments), and then have the original exit. That temporary copy could then modify the original image. To put data into your .exe, you can either use Resources, or manually modify the PE image, e.g., using a special section created inside the image to hold your data. You can also simply append arbitrary data at the end of an .exe file without corrupting it.
However, I would like to stress again that I do not recommend actually doing stuff like that. I would simply store data in separate files. If your users are familiar with Excel, then they should be familiar with the idea that data is stored in files…
I know how to create and code my own setup program but i need to be redirected at some point. This point i'm sure inlight other people too.
I created a setup project. All is done. Except, installation files inside of EXE.
I know 2 different ways of doing this:
Create resource in EXE and embed RAR/ZIP file.
Put compressed archive with files along with EXE. EXE will read contents and data from this protected and compressed ZIP.
But what i want is number 1. I want to embed it. But;
What is the proper way of embedding this? Are other setup creators do the same thing? Embed resource as compressed single zip in EXE? Or do they another trick?
How do you extract files? On the fly by memory? Like read each file one-by-one. Synced. Or first, copy ZIP to temp and extract from it.
Or even embed all files separately to the resources.
I, even think that if i should create simple MSI without dialogs and embed it and run from background but i want to take all control. I want everything belongs to the original setup that i created.
Note:
I want to make my own dialogs, effects, procedures, functions and
steps. Yes, MSI is acceptable but i will stick with its features. Oh,
If im able to extend it, why should i spent more time doing this
instead of making my own? I am so confused... I am talking about very big setup project here. Not just a standard ugly UI with less features. At least, im gonna try :)
Do not give me any sample/code just show me a correct path, please.
Best options here:
Create ZIP compatible EXE that reads itself as ZIP and read the file list and extract.
Create non-zip compatible EXE that has a hidden body somewhere and read that area (seek) and get the list & extract.
The proper way to do it is to use the Windows installer technology, aka MSI. There is a nice, Microsoft blessed toolset called WiX that you can use to greatly simplify the process.
http://wix.codeplex.com/
If you are truly intent on reinventing the wheel, you can look through the source code to WiX on how things are done.
Best options here:
Create ZIP compatible EXE that reads itself as ZIP and read the file list and extract.
Create non-zip compatible EXE that has a hidden body somewhere and read that area (seek) and get the list & extract.
Why write your own? Much easier to use WiX (http://wixtoolset.org/) with optionally a graphical interface like WiXEdit (http://wixedit.sourceforge.net/). Have you thought about additional requirements like uninstall etc...
Good luck!
Would InnoSetup help with your problem? You can personalise the dialogs and extend its functionality quite a lot.
I am a beginner in visual studio and has only code C and C++ in command line settings.
Currently, I am taking a module(software development) which requires me to come up with an expense tracker - a program which helps user tracks his/her daily expenses. Therefore, at the end of each individual day, or after a user uses finishes the program, we would have to perform data storage to store all the info in one place which we would export it during the next usage.
My constraint include not using any relational database(although i have no idea what it is :( ). Data storage must be done using XML or text files. Following this, I have several questions regarding data storage:
1) If data is stored successfully, do we export it everytime we start the program? And everytime after the user closes the program, we overwrite the existing data file and then store it accordingly?
2) I have heard from some people that using text file may be easier. Searching on the internet and library only provides me with information regarding XML and not text. Would anyone be able to help me with it? Like tutorials link and stuff?
Thank you very much!
File writing/handling works similar to every other buffer in c++.
you can enable file handling using the fstream header. You can create a file, write to it and over-write every time the program is run, or can even create a file the first time the program is run and then append to it every subsequent time the program runs.
Ive only ever done text files, never tried XML, but Im guessing they're similar.
http://www.cplusplus.com/doc/tutorial/files/ should give you everything you need to know.
Your choice of XML vs plain text depends on the kind of data that you'll be storing.
The reason why you'll only find XML libraries on the internet is because XML is a lot more complicated than plain text. If you don't know what XML is or if the data that you're storing isn't very complex, then I would suggest going with plain text.
For example, to track expenses, you might store a file like this:
sandwich 5.00
coffee 2.30
soft drink 1.50
...
It's very easy to read/write lines like this to/from a file in C++.
I know how I can bind C++ functions to AngelScript, but in my C++ code, how do I load an .as script file? How can I say in my C++ "Execute myscript.as now!" ?
In the AngelScript API I don't find any function like "LoadScript" or "ExecuteScript".
Or do I have to define a path somewhere from where AngelScript loads all scripts and I don't need to tell it the exact files?
Just found it out (in a small side sentence in the docs):
AngelScript doesn't provide a build in file loading. That's why there is no API function. So the manual loading is indeed the only way.
asIScriptModule::AddScriptSection will load a script string. asIScriptContext::Execute will execute a function from a script. The documentation was pretty clear about all of this; you might want to give it a look.
Say I have created a GUI (Qt) that operates with some data(text+image). How I can export that data in one of listed formates in title.
I guess it is better to export info .rtf as it is free cross-platform formt(??), isn't it?
See question about RTF reading and writing.
Depends on what you're trying to do, but maybe HTML + separate image file would be good enough?
If you want to export a file that is easy to view/print etc., but you don't really need to import it back into your application, you could make a PDF.
Do you mean you want to have something that looks like a snapshot of your gui?
In other case you could see it like the document export is just another way to view your data. One way is building your GUI, another way is to build some sort of document and write to a file.
Depending on how much you've mixed your data with the presentation, this could be hard or (comparatively) easy.
I don't know of any way to automatically do this for a QT gui, and I doubt you'll find a tool that does what you want.