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From: | "Jack Klein" <jackklein AT worldnet DOT att DOT net> |
Newsgroups: | comp.lang.c,comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
Subject: | Re: Executing a program and obtaining its return value |
Date: | 10 Apr 1998 03:22:40 GMT |
Organization: | AT&T WorldNet Services |
Lines: | 20 |
Message-ID: | <6gk3a0$od0@bgtnsc02.worldnet.att.net> |
References: | <352C1A0D DOT 77EAB402 AT codex DOT nu> <352C2306 DOT 2F72 AT cs DOT com> <352CCA6F DOT 277B AT plinet DOT com> |
NNTP-Posting-Host: | 12.66.119.159 |
To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
Charles Terry <cterry AT plinet DOT com> wrote in article <352CCA6F DOT 277B AT plinet DOT com>... [snip] > This thread brought up a question for me. > What is the state of the system if you do a tsr exit on a protected > mode program. I guess the most practical reason to ask is > in the event of needing to write a tsr do I have to keep a > 16 bit compiler around? > > Charles Terry <Jack> Since the C language standard doesn't define tsr's or protected mode, you'd better ask in comp.os.msdos.programmer. </Jack>
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