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| From: | Eugene Ageenko <ageson AT cs DOT joensuu DOT fi> |
| Newsgroups: | comp.os.msdos.djgpp,gnu.gcc,gnu.gcc.help |
| Subject: | Re: Portability and size_t type related question |
| Date: | Thu, 13 May 1999 13:12:00 +0300 |
| Organization: | University of Joensuu / Dept. of Computer Sci. |
| Lines: | 18 |
| Message-ID: | <373AA570.E2AF141B@cs.joensuu.fi> |
| References: | <Pine DOT SOL DOT 4 DOT 10 DOT 9905121713580 DOT 9519-100000 AT cs DOT joensuu DOT fi> |
| NNTP-Posting-Host: | cspc52.joensuu.fi |
| Mime-Version: | 1.0 |
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| CC: | Pasi Franti <franti AT cs DOT joensuu DOT fi>, |
| Juha Hakkarainen <jhakka AT cs DOT joensuu DOT fi> | |
| To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
| DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
| Reply-To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
Thank you all for the answer. When I need to get portable i/o I will read/write by byte chunks When I need memory variable to be exactly 32-bit long, I will define type for it (like U32), and then change this type depending on the system. I understand that this case is not a bets solution, and one better to avoid it, but it is indeed important in a low level operations (e.g. ari-coder) I think it is the way it is. Eugene
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