No April Fool's this time...
(but not nearly as exciting either)
Anyway, what the title says...
CivSwap is a little program that monitors game progress by checking the autosave, and can launch a program/batch file on set turns. As the name suggests, that program/batch file will most likely be a file swapping batch file, although it can be anything else.
Scenario players will no longer have to start a batch file while playing. All they need to do is run CivSwap at startup, turn on autosaving, and load the specified savegame when notified by events.
The readme contains a more detailed description, as well as a lengthy example (based on BeBro's Imperium Romanum)...
You can find CivSwap on my utility website. The readme is also available online, in the help section:
Oh, you'll need the VB6 run-time files, as usual... If you have any of my other utilities, you'll have these already.
I would especially like to hear some comments about my readme.
(but not nearly as exciting either)Anyway, what the title says...
CivSwap is a little program that monitors game progress by checking the autosave, and can launch a program/batch file on set turns. As the name suggests, that program/batch file will most likely be a file swapping batch file, although it can be anything else.
Scenario players will no longer have to start a batch file while playing. All they need to do is run CivSwap at startup, turn on autosaving, and load the specified savegame when notified by events.
The readme contains a more detailed description, as well as a lengthy example (based on BeBro's Imperium Romanum)...
You can find CivSwap on my utility website. The readme is also available online, in the help section:
Oh, you'll need the VB6 run-time files, as usual... If you have any of my other utilities, you'll have these already.
I would especially like to hear some comments about my readme.
I guess you could compare it to what you can do with Windows Explorer (except it's in a command-line environment). You can create/delete/move/copy files and directories, run programs, see directory listings and file properties. That sort of thing.
It looks like I was actually almost 4 years late with CivSwap!!
At a casual glance, the user guide appears a bit rough. It's written in broken English and could probably do with a decent example for clarification. Looks impressive, though.
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