Xref: news2.mv.net comp.os.msdos.djgpp:6150 From: brucef AT central DOT co DOT nz (Bruce Foley) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: DJGPP HELP!!!!! Date: Fri, 19 Jul 1996 10:15:38 GMT Organization: Internet Company of New Zealand Lines: 31 Message-ID: <4snqj8$95n@status.gen.nz> References: <31EAFEE1 DOT 6CA6 AT esper DOT com> <1996Jul16 DOT 103301 DOT 2010 AT zippy DOT dct DOT ac DOT uk> NNTP-Posting-Host: brucef.central.co.nz To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp ccjm AT dstn06 DOT dct DOT ac DOT uk (Colin MacDonald) wrote: >Try something like Turbo C/C++ or Visual C, or read a book. DJGPP is written by >and for old codgers, not eager young whipper-snappers. >Good luck, > -Colin MacDonald- = http://river.tay.ac.uk/~insicm/index.html = I have recently switched from Borland C (real-mode) to DJGPP's DPMI environment, and to be honest, I have found it to be quite straight forward. Any added complexities are due to the fact that it is DPMI, but then again, any compiler that offers DPMI (and the choices are limited) will have this. The only thing I would say is that none of the debuggers I have encountered can hold a candle (IMHO) to Borlands Turbo Debugger; or even Code View, for that matter. I guess I only really consider this a problem because when I learnt C and Asm I found using Turbo Debugger to be a great learning tool. All the same, I paid cold hard cash for all my Borland stuff, and even then, they could not offer a decent DPMI compiler. Certainly nothing to compare to DJGPP. In fact, Borland 5 doesn't even support DPMI -they say you have to install 4.5 as well if you want to write 32-bit DOS apps. Considering Borland 5 took up about 150 Megs, that's asking alot. Bruce.