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Mail Archives: djgpp/1997/10/22/19:39:23

Date: Wed, 22 Oct 1997 16:37:03 -0700 (PDT)
Message-Id: <199710222337.QAA21229@adit.ap.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
To: dagan AT ihug DOT co DOT nz, djgpp AT delorie DOT com
From: Nate Eldredge <eldredge AT ap DOT net>
Subject: Re: GUI's for DJGPP.............Where are they, what are they
called, and what do they look like ??

At 11:07  10/20/1997 GMT, dagan_NOFUCKENSPAM_ AT ihug DOT co DOT nz wrote:
> Hello people.
>
> Few questions about DJGPP.
>
> First. Are there any GUI's for DJGPP ??
Do you want a GUI library, or a graphical editor? Since you say you are
wanting to try DJGPP, I'll assume the latter. If the former, some GUI
libraries include Allegro, SWORD, and Turbo Vision from RHIDE's sources.
>
> Second. If there are, what are they called, and where can I get them
>from ??
The `standard' development environments for DJGPP are:
- RHIDE. A lookalike to Borland's Turbo <X> environment, but freeware and
IMHO much better. In the v2apps/ directory where you got DJGPP, IIRC.
- GNU Emacs. The world's most powerful editor, or so many consider. Quite
popular in the Unix world. Unfortunately doesn't support interactive
debugging from inside it.
>
> Third. What do the GUI's look like ?? Are they anything like the old
>Borland DOS GUI's for Pascal/C/C++ etc ???
RHIDE is quite similar.
>
> Just wanting to try DJGPP, but I'm waiting for a GUI first.........
>
> Oh....also, what GUI is the LEAST buggy ??
Emacs has been around MUCH longer, but RHIDE is native to DOS... I've found
that bugs in either get fixed very fast.

Nate Eldredge
eldredge AT ap DOT net



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