Acorn used to have this in RiscOS (probably still have), where a directory
which had a name beginning with a "!" was an application. This then had a
graphic file !Sprites, an execute script !Run and an FS browser
initilisation script !Boot ...
!Boot did basic things to make the OS "aware" of the application and set
application paths etc. !Run was the script that was run when you "executed"
the directory, and !Sprites held all the icons relevant to the application.
Problem was far too many libraries loaded on the system ... although IIRC
the OS managed those very well ...
P
> -----Original Message-----
> No, I mean the thing where an "application" is basically a
> directory containing binaries, libraries, configuration,
> which then appears in the GUI as a single icon. I think
> this is done in Mac too? And GNUStep...
>> It would be nice to have this at the command line level too.
> Basically executing the "directory" would run the application.
> But you could also cd into the directory and mess with stuff
> (given the right permissions).
>
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