Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

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  • =?Utf-8?B?UnVpIE9saXZlaXJh?=

    Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

    Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI, to use in a dialog?

    There is a movie called FILECOPY.AVI which is included with Visual
    Studio 2005, but it is the 16 bit (Windows 95) version. There are a
    few other videos in the same directory that look like the 32 bit
    versions.

    My question is: Where can I find a 32 bit (XP style) version of this
    video? I know it exists because if I copy files in XP, I get a
    different animation, with semi-transparent folders.

    Tks,
    Rui Oliveira
  • Mark Salsbery [MVP]

    #2
    Re: Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

    I don't see it in VS 2008 either.

    There's nothing that says Microsoft has to give their artwork free with the
    development tools, so there's no reason to expect it to be there.

    If you can find the OS dll or exe with the resource, you can probably
    extract it using Visual Studio.

    Mark

    --
    Mark Salsbery
    Microsoft MVP - Visual C++


    "Rui Oliveira" <RuiOliveira@di scussions.micro soft.comwrote in message
    news:CC9BF465-7462-4390-A56C-AE613886B870@mi crosoft.com...
    Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI, to use in a dialog?
    >
    There is a movie called FILECOPY.AVI which is included with Visual
    Studio 2005, but it is the 16 bit (Windows 95) version. There are a
    few other videos in the same directory that look like the 32 bit
    versions.
    >
    My question is: Where can I find a 32 bit (XP style) version of this
    video? I know it exists because if I copy files in XP, I get a
    different animation, with semi-transparent folders.
    >
    Tks,
    Rui Oliveira

    Comment

    • Jeroen Mostert

      #3
      Re: Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

      Mark Salsbery [MVP] wrote:
      I don't see it in VS 2008 either.
      >
      There's nothing that says Microsoft has to give their artwork free with
      the development tools, so there's no reason to expect it to be there.
      >
      If you can find the OS dll or exe with the resource, you can probably
      extract it using Visual Studio.
      >
      The keyword here is "extract". Don't just use the OS resource.



      --
      J.

      Comment

      • =?Utf-8?B?UnVpIE9saXZlaXJh?=

        #4
        Re: Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

        I extracted from shell32.dll.
        Tks

        "Jeroen Mostert" wrote:
        Mark Salsbery [MVP] wrote:
        I don't see it in VS 2008 either.

        There's nothing that says Microsoft has to give their artwork free with
        the development tools, so there's no reason to expect it to be there.

        If you can find the OS dll or exe with the resource, you can probably
        extract it using Visual Studio.
        The keyword here is "extract". Don't just use the OS resource.
        >

        >
        --
        J.
        >

        Comment

        • Mark Salsbery [MVP]

          #5
          Re: Where can I find XP version of FILECOPY.AVI ?

          Heh. Cool link, thank you! I never saw that blog entry before.

          I never imagined people actually, erm, "borrowed" resources from the OS
          *wink*.

          Disclaimer: I don't condone this behavior in any way. I just heard rumors
          it could be done.

          :-)

          Cheers,
          Mark

          --
          Mark Salsbery
          Microsoft MVP - Visual C++


          "Jeroen Mostert" <jmostert@xs4al l.nlwrote in message
          news:47c30a80$0 $14347$e4fe514c @news.xs4all.nl ...
          Mark Salsbery [MVP] wrote:
          >I don't see it in VS 2008 either.
          >>
          >There's nothing that says Microsoft has to give their artwork free with
          >the development tools, so there's no reason to expect it to be there.
          >>
          >If you can find the OS dll or exe with the resource, you can probably
          >extract it using Visual Studio.
          >>
          The keyword here is "extract". Don't just use the OS resource.
          >

          >
          --
          J.

          Comment

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