I'm using Igor on both winXP and win7. Sometimes I transfer projects from winXP to win7. My projects includes lots of data files. I would like to import the data into .pxp file w/o changing anything on the source files. However, the loading process will change the file's Date Modified. Could anyone tell me how to avoid it?
I use loadwave like this: LoadWave/Q/D/O/P=filePath fileName
Weird thing is that it was not doing that at the beginning. I don't quite remember when it started doing this.
LoadWave opens the file for read-only. It does not write to the file. I can't think of any reason why it would change the modification date.
I just tested Data->Load Waves->Load Waves (Load Delimited Text) under Windows 7 and I don't see any modification date change.
Reading the file will change the "last access" date on Windows. This is done automatically by the OS.
Quote:
Sometimes I transfer projects from winXP to win7.
I see that when you copy a file under Windows 7, the creation date is set to the date of the copy while the modification date remains unchanged from the original.
Thank you for your reply.
I have not observed what exact condition makes the files Modified date change. What I have seen is that things are a little bit random. I will pay more attention to this issue later on. I just want to see if anybody encountered the same issue with me.
I just tested Data->Load Waves->Load Waves (Load Delimited Text) under Windows 7 and I don't see any modification date change.
Reading the file will change the "last access" date on Windows. This is done automatically by the OS.
I see that when you copy a file under Windows 7, the creation date is set to the date of the copy while the modification date remains unchanged from the original.
February 4, 2012 at 07:15 am - Permalink
I have not observed what exact condition makes the files Modified date change. What I have seen is that things are a little bit random. I will pay more attention to this issue later on. I just want to see if anybody encountered the same issue with me.
February 4, 2012 at 06:48 pm - Permalink