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Rudy Velthuis wrote:
>
>
> I could use it. I installed a new game I had bought for my son (LEGO LOCO),
> which (I thionk) thoroughly ruined my Win98 installation. I had to
> re-install, but had problems, because the BIOS virus protection kept
> interfering, but couldn't show any message (somehow the Win98 installer
> didn't allow it). I finally found out and installed Win98 again. Now I
> didn't install the game on my new computer anymore, only on the old one,
> which my (6 year old) son will get now. I'm still using the old one now
> (must transfer 6GB of data on two HD first).
>
> But I know, I have a tendency to go off-topic (some people have others words
> for that, having something to do with elder women <g>).
>
<g>
Giving your old one to your son. Well I just started to build up a
render farm. I got an old one from my sister in law (?) and I bought 2
NE2000 compatible cards for 30,- DM each and a cable a some smalll bits.
With linux I hope to connect them quite soon. If not for the speed then
for the fun of it!
>
> Now to get to the topic again: I tried the code, using the flags -ansi
> and -pedantic and
> -Wall and it threw out some warnings (some void routines do not have a void
> declaration) but no error. I don't know anything about all the include
> directories, but I think you'll have to at least set pointers to the lib and
> include directories. Why don't you use RHIDE for Linux
> (http://www.tu-chemnitz.de/~rho/rhide-linux.html)? I use RHIDE for DOS and
> it strongly resembles the old Borland IDEs for DOS (Turbo Pascal and Turbo
> C++).
>
As I said, I'am not at all very familiar with the gcc. I tried the -ansi
flag and now I try yours too. I heard about RHIDE. Mybe I download it, I
liked the Borland environment for Turbo Pascal.
Thanks Rudy for your efforts!
Marc
--
Marc Schimmler
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