Quick Hash Crack Plus License Key
Quick Hash is a small-sized and portable software utility that enables you to calculate the hash of text strings and files. It offers support for MD5, SHA1, SHA256 and SHA512, and xxHash signatures.
As there is no setup pack involved, you can drop the executable file in any part of the hard disk and just click it to run.
Software company |
Ted Smith
|
Rank |
3.5
1043
3.5
|
Crack size | ~ 500KB |
Downloads total | 9555 |
Systems | Win XP, Win Vista, Win 7, Win 8, Win 10, Win 10 64 bit |
Another option is to save Quick Hash to a USB flash drive or similar storage unit, in order to run it on any PC with minimum effort and no previous installers.
An important aspect worth taking into account is that the Windows registry does not get updated with new entries, and no extra files are created on the disk, leaving it clean after removal.
The GUI is represented by a simple window split into several areas, dedicated to hashing text, files, files recursively, as well as hashing, copying and hashing recursively.
The first step is selecting the preferred checksum algorithm, after which you can type or paste text, point out a file using the file browser (drag and drop is supported), or pick an entire directory with files to process.
The hash is generated with the click of a button and you can copy it to the Clipboard. Furthermore, it is possible to make the tool save directories to log files (CSV or HTML), ignore subdirectories, flag duplicates, filter files by types when processing entire directories, and so on.
We have not come across any stability issues in our tests, since the app did not freeze, crash or display error notifications. Quick Hash Keygen has minimal impact on system resources, calculates hashes rapidly and it is very easy to work with, regardless of the user's previous experience with such apps. The interface could use a little work, though. For example, resizing the main window does not resize the UI elements as well.
ChangeLog
- Function CountGridRows has been changed. This function was designed to count the number of rows in any given display grid to determine whether the clipboard could be used, or whether the data would saved to a filestream. And, if the user chose to save the output to CSV or HTML, the same function would check to see if a memory list of strings could be used to then be saved out to a file, or whether a filestream should be used line by line.
- But, when saving the output of very large lists of files to HTML, filestreams were supposed to be incorporated rather than using RAM. However, due to the v3.3.0 adjustment of the function CountGridRows to use .RecordCount, .First and .Last, the variable that was used to check the number of rows was only showing what was on screen instead of what was in the table. So, QH was still using RAM even if the row count was many hundreds of thousands!! As such, it would cause QH to crash with large volumes of data. Fixing this required tow significant changes:
Comments
Gabriella, 28 November 2018
Baie dankie vir die serial Quick Hash
giovanna, 29 January 2018
Cheers!
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