In the batch file I am writing which suffices for my need, I'm calling an app (WinMsg.exe) that creates a messagebox using text input. It offers two input switches, -m for text quoted or in a named variable containing text, and -f to read input from a text file, which can be taken from a named variable. The -m limit is 255 chrs while the -f limit is longer. The text I want as input is >255 chrs and is stored in one or more variables. I can use multiple variables with -m but it breaks when the total exceeds 255 chrs. So it appears -f will have to be used. My question is, if -f is expecting a filename, is there a way to "disguise" or somehow redirect my text string variables to be read as if they were actually contained in a file, and without first writing the variable content to a file? I've not seen any questions with quite the same objective and I have doubts that it is even possible but I want to be sure.
1 Answer
There is absolutely no need to think about your SSD. A high end SSD with plenty of free space in a home computer lasts centuries.
This reads from StdIn by line and displays in a Msgbox
Set Inp = WScript.Stdin
Do Until Inp.AtEndOfStream
MsgBox Inp.Readline
Loop
Or the whole file
Set Inp = WScript.Stdin
MsgBox Inp.ReadAll
To use
Cscript //nologo "C:\folder\file.vbs" < "c:\windows\win.ini"
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The MTBF is definitely higher than in the past, but don't they still slow down with increased use? Oct 20, 2018 at 2:57
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MTBF is a measure of reliability not lifetime. A 100,000 hour MTBF means that if you run 100,000 of them one will fail each hour.– CatCatOct 20, 2018 at 3:41
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I know what it means. The question still stands, don't they slow down with age? Has that curve changed substantially? Oct 21, 2018 at 2:57
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Under normal circumstances your drive will break with age before it reaches it operating life. Writing win.ini every second to a 1 terabyte drive will use up 1/3000th of your operating life in 34 years.– CatCatOct 21, 2018 at 19:11
-f
ile, option, then you must by virtue of that provide a file as input. What's stopping you from writing to a temporary file reading it in as input and deleting it again? the read/write option is unlikely to be noticeably less efficient.