Visual Basic 6.0
Visual Basic 6.0
Create Zip in a BinData Object
See more Zip Examples
Recursively appends files in a directory tree and writes a zip archive into a Chilkat BinData object.Chilkat Visual Basic 6.0 Downloads
Dim success As Long
success = 0
' This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
' See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
Dim zip As New ChilkatZip
' Initialize the zip object. Because we will never actually write a zip file to the filesystem,
' the filepath passed to NewZip does not matter.
success = zip.NewZip("x.zip")
If (success <> 1) Then
Debug.Print zip.LastErrorText
Exit Sub
End If
' Append a directory tree. The call to AppendFiles does
' not read the file contents or append them to the zip
' object in memory. It simply appends references
' to the files so that when WriteBd, WriteZip, or WriteZipAndClose
' is called, the referenced files are streamed and compressed
' into the .zip output file (or BinData object).
Dim recurse As Long
recurse = 1
success = zip.AppendFiles("c:/temp/a/*",recurse)
If (success <> 1) Then
Debug.Print zip.LastErrorText
Exit Sub
End If
' Write the zip archive into the bdZip object.
Dim bdZip As New ChilkatBinData
success = zip.WriteBd(bdZip)
If (success <> 1) Then
Debug.Print zip.LastErrorText
Exit Sub
End If
' We could directly access the bytes of the zip archive, or perhaps
' get the zip bytes in base64 format.
Dim zipAsBase64 As String
zipAsBase64 = bdZip.GetEncoded("base64")
Debug.Print zipAsBase64
' Or the zip can be used by some other Chilkat method call that accepts
' a BinData object as an argument.