I've written a program. To install this program, I'm going to need to
initialize some stuff for the users environment, specifically the name/
location of an internal state file.
Currently, I'm hard coding the location of this file, but that's in-
elegant. What I'd like to do is just ask the user
On Jun 25, 11:10 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I would think you could pop-up some dialog when the program is first
> run to ask where they want the file to be. On the first run though,
> you can just have the config file located in the current working
> directory with the script file itself. Then
On Jun 25, 11:37 am, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The traditional choices are the registry for Windows, and the /etc
> subtree for the various, almost uncountable, flavors of Unix and
> nixalikes. You're right, it's much more difficult per-system than
> per-user, since there are so man
On Jun 25, 12:14 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> usersChosenPath = /usr/Path/to/Config
>
>
> Kind of redundant, but I would think it would still work.
Ok... How do I tell the program where the INI file lives?
(What I want is to be able to ask the user
Where do you want the datafile to live?