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StackRunner is a simple 'player' application that will 'play' your LiveCode, Revolution, or MetaCard stacks and doesn't present any user-interface elements so it runs 'cleaner'. StackRunner is completely free and can be distributed with your stacks, whether they be personal, commercial, or otherwise. FILE FORMAT NOTE: If you want StackRunner to work with Revolution or MetaCard stacks that were created in Revolution 2.6.x or earlier, you will need to download the version of StackRunner that works with those stacks (StackRunner 1.3) due to a file format change that took place when Revolution 2.7 was released. (StackRunner 1.3 also is the only version that works with Mac OS 9, if you need that operating system supported.) Even though you can use StackRunner 2.0 to open stacks built in older versions of Revolution, any changes to those stacks may cause them to be saved in the newer file format.
It is therefore recommended that you choose the version of StackRunner that best suits the engine version that your stacks were developed in. For this reason, both versions are available for download below. After clicking on one of the links above and decompressing the file that you have downloaded, you will see the following, based on the platform you downloaded: StackRunner (Mac OS 9 - all versions) An application called 'StackRunner' StackRunner (Mac OS X - all versions) An application called 'StackRunner.app' (the.app may not be visible) StackRunner (Windows - all versions) A folder called 'StackRunner18Win Folder' (or equivalent) with the application 'StackRunner.exe', and a few DLL files and a folder called 'Externals' StackRunner (Linux - Version 1.3) An application called 'StackRunner'. StackRunner is dependent on certain files for it to operate properly. With all versions except the Windows version, the extra files are either built into the executable, or are bundled invisibly with them so that you only have one icon to manipulate. The Windows version, however, MUST be kept with the DLLs and Externals folder that it came with, and will not work properly (or at all) if the executable is taken out of the folder.
If you want to make just the icon for the StackRunner application available, please create a shortcut to the executable and place it wherever you want it. Using StackRunner. Note: As of the current version of SR, you may be able to double-click on a stack file to launch SR on the Mac, but if you have LiveCode or Revolution already on the Mac, you will likely get unpredictable results. Since file associations need to be set in the Registry on Windows, double-clicking a stack file in Windows will not launch SR.
The same goes for Linux, where there isn't even a Registry. External/Library/Database Support StackRunner 2.0 comes preconfigured with all of the LiveCode externals, libraries, and database drivers available in LiveCode Desktop (or Revolution Studio), so you don't have to provide any of these yourself. Renaming StackRunner SR is very customizable to suit your deployment. You can even rename the StackRunner executable to some other name and it will look like your own creation.
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To do this, you will need to do the following (I'll use the example of changing the name of SR to 'FlashCards'):. For MacOS 9: Change the name of 'StackRunner' to 'FlashCards'.
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For MacOS X: Change the name of 'StackRunner.app' to 'FlashCards.app' (note that that '.app' may not be showing depending on your settings). Doing this will only change the name of the program in the Finder; as soon as the user executes the program, the process name (i.e. The name that appears in the Application menu, in process-watching apps like Activity Monitor, or during program switching with command-tab) will still say 'StackRunner'. This is because it gets this information from file(s) that are inside the application bundle. If you want to change the process name, and look in the section entitled 'Carbon Application (Mach-O)'.
For Windows: Change the name of 'StackRunner.exe' to 'FlashCards.exe'. For Linux: Change the name of 'StackRunner' to 'FlashCards'. Opening Stacks With StackRunner SR will open your stack when SR is double-clicked in one of three ways:.
You can name your stack file main.rev and put it in the same directory as SR (all platforms). If SR finds a file by that name when it launches, it will automatically open it. If you want to put your stack in some other place, or you want it named something other than 'main.rev', you can create a configuration file called config.srn and put it in the same directory as SR (all platforms). It must contains one or more of the following property assignment lines (can be in any order): open= pathToStack where pathToStack is a full or relative path to the stack to open, or a URL to where the stack is located. If using a URL, it must be a full URL, starting with '(ex.
Note: If you are on OS X and you wish to open a stack that is inside the application bundle, see below for instructions on how to do this. DialogText= textToDisplay where textToDisplay is the prompt in the answer file dialog. QuitAction= action where action determines what to do when the the last stack closes. It can be set to quit, which will cause StackRunner to quit when the last stack closes, or to ask which will leave StackRunner open and bring up the 'Please select a stack:' dialog. Note: If a stack is automatically opened (either through having a main.rev stack or by having a valid stack in the open property), StackRunner will by default automatically quit when the last stack is closed if no quitAction has been defined. If no stack is automatically opened, StackRunner will by default bring up the 'Please select a stack:' dialog (with your custom dialogText if applicable).
SuppressErrors= trueFalse where trueFalse is either true or false (the default if not supplied). If true, any errors encountered during startup will be suppressed and not reported to the user. Example: open=/users/kenray/desktop/test.rev dialogText=Please locate 'test.rev': quitAction=quit suppressErrors=false If a stack cannot be found at the path you've provided in the open property, an answer file dialog will come up with the prompt specified in the dialogText property. You can do nothing, and SR will present an answer file dialog that says 'Please select a stack to open:' Working With the Application Bundle (OS X Only). Looking For 'main.rev' and 'config.srn' When StackRunner starts up, the defaultFolder is the folder where the StackRunner application resides (indicated by 'SR Folder' below). Suppose you are creating an OS X application called MyApp, and you have renamed StackRunner to 'MyApp' and gone through the steps listed above under. To deploy this as a single-icon, self-contained application, you would like to be able to reference your main stack to load, which is called 'MyApp.rev', and you want to put it into the Contents folder of the bundle.
Because it's not called 'main.rev', you need to include a config.srn. And since you want to deploy a single icon, you need to put the config.srn in the bundle as well. Based on the preceding sections, here's what you'd do:. Open the 'MyApp.app' bundle, go to the Contents folder, and copy your MyApp.rev stack into it. Using a text editor, create a file called 'config.srn', and put the following 'open=' property assignment line into it (at a minimum): open=MyApp.app/Contents/MyApp.rev.
Save the 'config.srn' file, and move it into the Resources folder inside the bundle. The application bundle should now look like the image to the left. Version History Release Date Built w/Rev Changes and Additions 2.0 2/14/2010 4.0.0 Updated to use Rev 4.0.0 engine, and includes the Data Grid library.
1.9 10/8/2008 3.0.0 Updated to use Rev 3.0.0 engine. Download:, 1.8.1 7/26/2008 2.9.0 Updated to provide support for deploying single-icon applications on OS X by using the application bundle.
Download:, 1.8 5/17/2008 2.9.0 Updated to use Rev 2.9.0 engine, including externals for revBrowser and revFont. Download:, 1.7 6/2/2007 2.8.1 Updated to use Rev 2.8.1 engine, including externals for revBrowser and revFont. Download:, 1.6 2/28/2007 2.8.0 Updated to use Rev 2.8.0 engine.
Download:, 1.5 8/27/2006 2.7.2 Updated to use new Rev engine; couldn't use 2.7.3 because of AppleEvent bug that scrambles incoming AppleEvents so they can't be trapped. Also provided new Universal Binary, PowerPC and Intel x86 builds. Download:, 1.4 3/8/2006 2.7.0 Created new version of SR due to file format change and release of Revolution 2.7. Download:, 1.3 1/16/2006 2.6.1 Added ability to open stacks from the web by providing a url in the open property of the 'config.srn' file.
1.2 1/1/2006 2.6.1 Fixed bug where dragging-and-dropping a file onto SR, or double-clicking on a file that was associated with SR would not respect the 'config.srn' file. 1.1 2.6.1 Fixed bug where the configuration settings for dialogText were not being respected if you launched with no 'main.rev' but had an alternate dialogText. Simplified method of detecting when StackRunner was the last open stack after another stack had closed to be able to implement the quitAction. Added Linux version of StackRunner. Added custom properties to make StackRunner. 1.0.3 2.6.1 Fixed bug where the 'closeStack' message wasn't being sent to the last stack that closed. 1.0.2 9/8/2005 2.6.1 Added quitAction property to config file and added default behavior when the last stack is closed.
1.0.1 9/6/2005 2.6.1 Fixed bug where config file wouldn't open a defined stack properly. 1.0 9/6/2005 2.6.1 Initial Release.