INISED

Version: 
1.1
Release date: 
Sunday, 18 December, 1994

License:

Interface:

Authors/Port authors:

INISED is a command line utility that can read and write values to/from Windows-style profile  files (INI files). It is intended to automate the reconfiguring  of programs without the need to maintain multiple versions on INI  files. INISED can manipulate files based on command line parameters,  or can read a sequence of commands from a script file. Therefore, it is quite simple to load a word processor using a limited subset of fonts or run the Windows environment using an alternate shell.

This software is distributed as compressed package. You have to download and manually install it; if prerequisites are required, you will have to manually install them too.

Manual installation

Program is distributed as ZIP package: download to temporary directory and unpack to destination folder. See below for download link(s).

Following ones are the download links for manual installation:

INISED v. 1.1 (BBS, 18/12/1994, Paul Gallagher) Readme/What's new
INISED v1.0 - Utility to Manipulate Windows-style Profile (INI) files ===================================================================== Copywrite (c) Paul Gallagher 1994. The author grants general permission to distribute and use this package, provide it remains complete as detailed in section (1), is not modified in any way, and is not sold for more than a reasonable media and distribution charge. Contents of this file: 1. Package 2. Version History 3. Contacting the author 4. System Requirements 5. About INISED 6. Using INISED 1. Package ========== INISED.TXT = this file DOS\INISED.EXE = DOS executable OS2\INISED.EXE = OS/2 v2.x executable 2. Version History ================== 94.12.18 : v1.0 for DOS and OS/2. The OS/2 exe should run under NT, but this hasn't been tested yet! 3. Contacting the Author ======================== Paul Gallagher: Contact me by mail at <paulg@resmel.bhp.com.au> tel: +61-3-566-1023 (BH Australian Eastern time). 4. System Requirements ====================== INISED requires DOS v3.x or higher, or OS/2 v2.0 or higher. 5. About INISED =============== INISED is a command line utility (OS/2 and DOS versions included) that can read and write values to/from Windows-style profile files (INI files). It is intended to automate the reconfiguring of programs without the need to maintain multiple versions on INI files. INISED can manipulate files based on command line parameters, or can read a sequence of commands from a script file. 6. Using INISED =============== (NB. DOS or OS2 versions operate identically) Getting help: INISED -? First a bit about INI file terminology. The Windows Profile (INI) file format is text, whereas OS/2 support binary INI files. This utility does *not* support binary INI files, so the OS/2 format will not be discussed further. In an INI file, we basically have a series of keyed definitions contained within application sections, as follows... [section] keyname=value keyname=value [section] keyname=value Obviously, actual section and key names should be unique. INISED provides a means of reading and writing values to INI files based on the section and key. Each INISED command provides a selection of the following information: . INI file name . section name . key name . value . default The INISED can take all of this information on a command line. For example, the following command issued at the DOS prompt will read the value of the key called "shell" in the "boot" section of the SYSTEM.INI file: INISED system.ini boot shell the following command is used to set the key to a new value: INISED system.ini boot shell=appbar This example demonstrates the purpose of INISED quite well: say you wanted to use the boot configuration manager in DOS 6 and higher to create 2 system configurations: one that brought Windows up with the standard Program Manager, and a personal config that used AppBar as the Windows shell. You could create two SYSTEM.INI files, and have the AUTOEXEC.BAT file copy the appropriate file into the Windows directory at boot, but what about preserving changes that may have been made to the file, by installing some new software for example. You could go through the laborious process of migrating SYSTEM.INI modifications to your "master" INI files, but this is not very practical. The easier solution is to use INISED to modify the "shell" specification in situ: use it to modify the *current* SYSTEM.INI file, thus preserving any modification made since you established your multiple configurations. Command line operations ======================= So, what are the range of commands that you can give INISED? There are a few, but most are based on the common syntax... INISED inifile section[= | keyname[= |=value | default]] in the above, [] brackets enclose optional entries (and are not to be entered as part of the command, and the | character seperates alternatives. If we expand the command into all its permutations, we get: - read a keyed value INISED inifile section keyname - read a keyed value, with default INISED inifile section keyname default - set a keyed value INISED inifile section keyname=value - delete a keyed value INISED inifile section keyname= - read an entire section INISED inifile section - delete an entire section INISED inifile section= Note, when "reading" values, they are written to the console, and thus may be redirected to a file or another process using the standard operating system redirection ("<",">") and pipe ("|") operators. Batch operation =============== There is one other significant mode of operation for INISED: using script files. Invoking INISED with the command: INISED @filename will force INISED to read the file called "filename" and process the file line by line, interpreting each line as a command. Commands use the same syntax as above, but naturally drop the "INISED" prefix ie: inifile section[= | keyname[= |=value | default]] This mode allows a series of INI file manipulations to be collected as a unit and stored in a file. Embeeded spaces in parameters ============================= Care is needed when paramters contain embedded spaces. Sections, keys and values may all contain embedded spaces, as can INI file names under OS/2. How should the program interpret the following? INISED program.ini default settings initialposition On the face of it, it means read the value of the key "settings" in the "default" section, using "initialposition" as the default of no entry actually exists. What was intended however, was to read the value of "initialposition" in the "default settings" section. Hmmm. The answer is to use either single or double quotation marks to contain terms that have spaces within them. The following command returns the value intended: INISED program.ini "default settings" initialposition All components of the command may be quoted to preserve embedded spaces: section and key names, values and defaults, and INI file names.
 ecsoft2.org/system/files/repository/inised10.zip  local copy
Record updated last time on: 22/08/2023 - 21:27

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