The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
There are situations in which an application extracts information from
another application's executable image file without loading the other
application. The Microsoft Windows Program Manager does this when it
extracts an icon from an .exe file to represent the application.
MORE INFORMATIONThe following files are available for download from the Microsoft
Download Center. Click the file names below to download the files: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/search.aspand then click How to use the Microsoft Download Center. NOTE: Because EXEVIEW uses code from the common dialog boxes dynamic-link library (COMMDLG.DLL), version 3.1 of the Microsoft Windows SDK is required to build the sample. However, EXEVIEW will run under either Windows version 3.0 or 3.1 provided that the COMMDLG.DLL file is installed. EXEVIEW uses the information in both the Old Executable Header and the New Executable Header, each of which are documented in "The MS-DOS Encyclopedia" (Microsoft Press). EXEVIEW loads both headers and all the tables to which they refer. These tables include: the entry table, the segment table, the resource table, the resident and nonresident name tables, and the imported name table. EXEVIEW loads the resources listed in the resource table and displays them. Windows resources (icons, cursors, bitmaps, menus, and so forth) are displayed graphically. String tables and resource directories (of icons, cursors, fonts, and so forth) are listed in text format. For more information on the file formats and resource formats, see the Windows SDK "Programmer's Reference, Volume 4: Resources," "The MS-DOS Encyclopedia," the September, 1991, issue of the "Microsoft Systems Journal," or the Microsoft Open Tools documentation. Additional query words:
Keywords : kbfile kbsample kb16bitonly kbResource kbGrpUser kbWinOS310 |
Last Reviewed: December 3, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |