| www.delorie.com/opendos/archives/browse.cgi | search |
| Date: | Fri, 18 Apr 1997 16:15:36 +0200 (MET DST) |
| From: | Mark Habersack <grendel AT hoth DOT amu DOT edu DOT pl> |
| Reply-To: | grendel AT hoth DOT amu DOT edu DOT pl |
| To: | -= ArkanoiD =- <ark AT mpak DOT convey DOT ru> |
| cc: | pp AT 55-174 DOT hy DOT cgocable DOT ca, opendos-developer AT delorie DOT com |
| Subject: | Re: Usage of directory entries |
| In-Reply-To: | <ACF4gLpW27@mpak.convey.ru> |
| Message-ID: | <Pine.BSI.3.96.970418161452.23833D-100000@hoth.amu.edu.pl> |
| Organization: | PPP (Pesticide Powered Pumpkins) |
| MIME-Version: | 1.0 |
On Fri, 18 Apr 1997, -= ArkanoiD =- wrote: > > And from what I've heard, the OpenDOS sources needs a gazillion compilers > > to build... Yes, definitely, we'd need some standard free compilers! I > > don't know of good 16-bit C compilers for free (in the GPL sense), > > btw gcc requires 32-bit machine to run but it *can* produce 16-bit or even > 8-bit code - so why djgpp can not? GCC as such *cannot* produce 16-bit code. Only on linux you have 16-bit tools (assembler and linker). No version of gcc produces 16-bit code.
| webmaster | delorie software privacy |
| Copyright © 2019 by DJ Delorie | Updated Jul 2019 |