Скачать PDir 1.0 - Object Oriented Directory Routines

PDir v1.0, 18 Aug 89

Palcic Directory Routines

Matthew J. Palcic
MJP Enterprises
1030 Dayton-Yellow Springs Rd.
Xenia, OH  45385-9508

     The routines in PDir are Copyright (C) 1989 by Matthew J. Palcic.
The code is public domain, but a donation would be greatly appreciated.
Any suggestions for modifications/additions to the source code are
welcome.  However, the source code is to be distributed only in its
original, unmodified form.  MJP Enterprises reserves the rights to all
code and documentation included with PDir.  MJP Enterprises and Matthew
J. Palcic shall not be held responsible for any damages resulting from
the use of this code.  No warranty is offered (express or written) for
the performance or accuracy of the documentation and source code.  If
you plan to use PDir for a distribution program (shareware, public
domain or commercial) please inform Matthew Palcic at the address above.
I'd like to know who's using my code and for what purposes.

     PDir was developed using Turbo Pascal 5.5 on a 286 machine running
MS-DOS 4.01. Requires the Objects unit found on the Turbo Pascal 5.5
distribution disks.

     The routines in the PDir unit are based almost entirely on the
object-oriented extensions in Turbo Pascal 5.5.  The user should be
familiar with the stream, node and list types found in the Objects unit
provided in OOPDEMOS.ARC found on the Turbo 5.5 distribution disks. Also
an understanding of recursive calls is helpful but not required to use
the routines.  Even though there are many methods which may not be used
in a program, the smart linker will eliminate all unused methods at
compile time.  The data elements in the objects should not be directly
accessed in a program; the methods defined for each object should be
sufficient forms of access to the data elements.  If these routines do
not fill a need, define a descendant object type that inherits all the
other routines and adds the function you need.  It is strongly
recommended that the user employ these objects as dynamic (using their
Ptr counterparts) rather than static.  This offers much more flexibility
than the static routines can offer.

     Throughout this documentation a compact notation is used to
describe any elements or routines from other units.  Turbo Pascal allows
a unit specifier to precede any items in the unit to prevent ambiguity
(such two procedures having the same name.)

  An example:

       PDir defines a routine Rename that calls the Dos unit's routine
       Rename.  Calling Rename does not clearly call either version so
       PDir.Rename and Dos.Rename explicitly call one or the other.

This notation is also used to specify where a routine, variable, etc.
originates.  Rather than saying 'The NameStr type found in the Dos unit'
the documentation would read Dos.NameStr.  Sufficient documentation is
found in the Turbo Pascal manual such that they need not be explained
here.  The examples will build on other methods in the object for
clarity.