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Indexing Your CD-ROM Disk Collection (continued page 2)

by Ken Seamon

Operation 

Here's a description of the four files you will use. The text editor comes with Windows and the others are all created with the text editor.

1. Info.bat (< click for listing) - presents a reminder of how to index CD-ROM discs, and how to seek information on the indexed discs. It performs no task except to prompt you with information.

2. Index.bat (< click for listing) - sends a directory listing of all the files on the CD-ROM disc into a text file with a unique number for a name, eg. 323.txt. That would be the 323rd disc that you indexed. For the next disc you put in the drive, you would type "index 324". It usually takes only two or three seconds to index a disc, then you will stick a number label on the spine of the disc case for easy reference. When there are two discs in one case, put a label, say 100 on the spine, but "index 100A" and "index 100B" separately.

There is one configurable item in this file. You will have to make one manual edit to this file with Notepad. The 12th line in the batch file is

dir /b /s f:\*.* > %1.txt 

where "f:" is my CD-ROM drive. If your CD-ROM drive letter is not "f:", you must change it to the correct drive letter. For example, if your CD-ROM drive letter is "g:", then the line should read 

dir /b /s g:\*.* > %1.txt

3.Seek.bat (< click for listing) - enables you to search for a one-to-three word string (a set of words) through all of your numbered text files, and opens the results of your search with EDIT.COM.

For example, "seek my grocery list" 
(a three word string) would find the following files if they were on an indexed disc: 

my grocery list.txt
my grocery list.doc
my grocery listing.doc

however, it would not find: 

my list.txt
my list.doc
my_grocery_list.doc
grocery list.doc 

So, a two-to-three word string search is fairly exact. Otherwise, use a single word search to find your information. By the way, "seek excel.exe" is a single word search. Individual words are separated by a space. If you know both the filename and the extension, things are very easy.

Wildcard searching, eg. seek *list, is not supported, but I've been using this system for about five years and rarely fail to find what I'm looking for.

4. Edit.com - a simple but powerful text file editor that comes with Windows. It is located in your "c:\windows\command" directory. Edit.com has a search feature that you can use to refine your search within the results. 

Page 2 of 3.   Back Forward

 


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