Mail Archives: djgpp/2009/03/18/01:02:14
Hi,
On Mar 17, 8:48=A0pm, themouse <usul DOT the DOT mo DOT DOT DOT AT gmail DOT com> wrote:
> On Mar 17, 8:42=A0pm, "Rod Pemberton" <do_not_h DOT DOT DOT AT nohavenot DOT cmm> wrote:
> > "themouse" <usul DOT the DOT mo DOT DOT DOT AT gmail DOT com> wrote in message
>
> >news:06c3c085-f8d3-497f-8f68-3db8518f7938 AT e18g2000yqo DOT googlegroups DOT com..=
.
>
> > > Anyone know of any working links to programming in DOS?
>
> (snip bunch of useful links)
>
> > Rod Pemberton
>
> Great! TYVM!
> ~theMouse
Well, at the risk of overwhelming you, here's some more:
http://ftp.lanet.lv/ftp/mirror/x2ftp/msdos/programming/specs/
http://ftp.lanet.lv/ftp/mirror/x2ftp/msdos/programming/gpe/
http://www.eunet.bg/simtel.net/msdos/asmutl-pre.html
Note that some of those files are older versions (i.e. newer exists),
but overall it's pretty useful as is anyways. And there are of course
a bunch more, but this should keep you busy. But I do suggest you
focus on only a few things initially so as not to spread your self too
thin.
P.S. DJGPP FAQ and libc reference are extremely useful too. DPMI and
VESA specs are definitely some things you should check out ... and
also a quick glance at PCGPE might be vaguely interesting too. Most
importantly, though, check out srcs to other DJGPP apps (GNU Emacs ->
EM2005S.ZIP, libc -> DJLSR204.ZIP, Allegro -> ALL422S.ZIP, etc. etc.).
For assembly, (if you're bored or run into something ... somewhat
unlikely), check out pmtut002, debugtut, primer2, and FASM's forum
(supports COFF among others, very very nice DPMI DOS IDE which
assembles itself), which is extremely helpful and has examples and
good info. http://board.flatassembler.net
- Raw text -