Difference between revisions of "Mod2zmod"

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(Usage: removed "utils\" which was particular to my own Windows directory structure for Sword (I have a symbolic link).)
(Usage: added note 3)
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# In practice, all the existing compressed modules at CrossWire are ZIP compressType, so it's always preferred to choose this.
 
# In practice, all the existing compressed modules at CrossWire are ZIP compressType, so it's always preferred to choose this.
 
# <tt>mod2zmod</tt> can encipher as it compresses, so there's nothing preventing the creation of compressed TEI-sourced dictionaries.
 
# <tt>mod2zmod</tt> can encipher as it compresses, so there's nothing preventing the creation of compressed TEI-sourced dictionaries.
 +
# If you're the developer, there's nothing to stop you having both the uncompressed and compressed module installed.<BR>Just create a new [[DevTools:conf Files|conf file]] for the compressed module, remembering to give it a different module name.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 11:16, 15 November 2011

Introduction

mod2zmod creates a compressed module from an installed module.

In practice, tei2mod and osis2mod really only need to turn XML into raw{text|com|ld} modules. The reason for this is that mod2zmod (which works all module types except genbooks) will produce better compressed modules than the other conversion tools. In turn, the reason for this is that the conversion tools build modules incrementally and compress them incrementally, resulting in compressed modules that are not compressed as well as modules that are compressed all at once, as mod2zmod does. So it's always better to build module in a two-pass procedure: first pass to fix the contents and their order and second pass to compress and optionally encipher.

Usage

mod2zmod - a tool to create compressed Sword modules
version 0.1

usage: mod2zmod <modname> <datapath> [blockType [compressType [cipherKey]]]

datapath: the directory in which to write the zModule
blockType  : (default 4)
	2 - verses
	3 - chapters
	4 - books
compressType: (default 1):
	1 - LZSS
	2 - Zip

Notes:

  1. In practice, all the existing compressed modules at CrossWire are ZIP compressType, so it's always preferred to choose this.
  2. mod2zmod can encipher as it compresses, so there's nothing preventing the creation of compressed TEI-sourced dictionaries.
  3. If you're the developer, there's nothing to stop you having both the uncompressed and compressed module installed.
    Just create a new conf file for the compressed module, remembering to give it a different module name.

See also