51a41ac4ef
On Windows its better to use a shortcut (.lnk file) over a batch script (.bat) as we can specify the icon file for the .lnk and thus have these git specific objects appear on the desktop with that git specific icon file. Unfortunately the authors of Tcl did not bless us with the APIs needed to create shortcuts from within Tcl. But Microsoft did give us Windows Scripting Host which allows us to execute some JavaScript that calls some sort of COM object that can operate on a .lnk file. We now build both Cygwin and non-Cygwin "desktop icons" as proper Windows .lnk files, using the "Start in" property of these files to indicate the working directory of the repository the user wants to launch. Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
27 lines
560 B
Tcl
27 lines
560 B
Tcl
# git-gui Misc. native Windows 32 support
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# Copyright (C) 2007 Shawn Pearce
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proc win32_read_lnk {lnk_path} {
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return [exec cscript.exe \
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/E:jscript \
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/nologo \
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[file join $::oguilib win32_shortcut.js] \
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$lnk_path]
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}
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proc win32_create_lnk {lnk_path lnk_exec lnk_dir} {
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global oguilib
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set lnk_args [lrange $lnk_exec 1 end]
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set lnk_exec [lindex $lnk_exec 0]
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eval [list exec wscript.exe \
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/E:jscript \
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/nologo \
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[file join $oguilib win32_shortcut.js] \
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$lnk_path \
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[file join $oguilib git-gui.ico] \
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$lnk_dir \
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$lnk_exec] $lnk_args
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}
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