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| Message-ID: | <38B3FF66.A4EF6CC6@corel.com> |
| Date: | Wed, 23 Feb 2000 10:40:22 -0500 |
| From: | Jonathan Meunier <jonathanm AT corel DOT com> |
| X-Mailer: | Mozilla 4.7 [en] (Win95; U) |
| X-Accept-Language: | en |
| MIME-Version: | 1.0 |
| Newsgroups: | comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
| Subject: | Re: how to read keys |
| References: | <sb7v86rer2a162 AT corp DOT supernews DOT com> |
| NNTP-Posting-Host: | 120.150.4.236 |
| X-Trace: | 23 Feb 2000 10:38:56 -0500, 120.150.4.236 |
| Lines: | 28 |
| To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
| DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
| Reply-To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
mukt1000 wrote:
>
> Hi,
> 1.As a newbie I couldnt find a good replacement for pascal's "readkey"
> function in djgpp c++ v2.03
> (reads a key from the keyboard and returns the key-number);
> the "bioskey" and "kbhit" is slow.
>
> 2.I use c++ but I still use "libc.a" functions,is it worth to use libg++
> and are there any good referances
> for it.(libc.a has a very good referance with all functions included)
Try getch()..
eg:
int main() {
char key;
key = getch();
printf("You typed %c!",key);
return 0;
}
HTH,
.(Trancelucid).
. Jaune .
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