![]() ![]() The file should contain 8 ascii files (they're surface temperatures for a site on the surface of Mars). Alternatively, with macOS a double-click on a ZIP file is sufficient to unzip it with the default program. Step 2: Click on Open With in the shortcut menu and select Archive Utility (default). Here's a link to one of the files, I can't provide a link to the website I'm operating, it's not up and running yet. Step 1: Select the ZIP file you want to open and right-click on the selected file. ![]() I would prefer not to tell users to use the terminal though, if I can avoid it. Warning : 3 extra bytes at beginning or within zipfile (attempting to process anyway) Opening the zip file in the terminal using unzip works, though gives the warning Step 2: we right-click the zip file and choose Open With Stuffit Expander from the menu: Step 3: we choose where we want the unzipped file to be saved. ![]() I don't think that's the case with mine because it works fine on my Linux machine. Going by a google search the zip-cpgz loop looks like it is a pretty common problem, but almost all the solutions suggest that the original file was poorly formatted a zip of a non-existant initial file, a zip produced by a windows machine with a different file ending, things like that. Double clicking the cpgz file creates another cpgz, etc etc. But if I download the files using my Mac laptop the files will not unzip, double clicking creates a cpgz file. ![]() It works perfectly on the Fedora linux computer I'm running it on. I'm using PHP ZipArchive to allow website users to combine a few files into a zip file, and then download them. Dynamically created zip files by ZipStream in PHP won't open in OSX ![]()
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