Date: Fri, 17 Mar 1995 01:52:40 +0900 From: Stephen Turnbull Cc: DJGPP AT SUN DOT SOE DOT CLARKSON DOT EDU Subject: Gnu C under Windows? And Windows 3.1 please: a great lot of people still have Windows 3.1 . That's what Win32s is about: Windows 3.1 is a 16 bit partial operating system, Win32s is a thunk that converts 32 bit function calls to 16 bit calls. Why should someone rewrite Win32s? How long would it likely take for someone who knows more about Windows than I do, to write the required routines etc? I have a copy of a book "Windows 3.1 Programmer's Reference" by James W.McCord (ISBN 0-88022-787-7, publ. 1992 by Que Corporation, page numbers up to 1354), which describes at great length how to call a great lot of the routines needed to call the various things that happen in Windows. Given that Microsoft, as far as I am concerned, still hasn't gotten it right yet, you may as well forget about it. Doesn't the fact that there are 1354 pages of function calls give you an idea of the magnitude of the task you're talking about? But it seems that somebody's made a good start---have you been following the traffic about EMX and RSX for Windows programming? Even the proponents of that system admit it's not close to perfect yet, though. -- Stephen Turnbull / Yaseppochi-gumi / http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp/ anon FTP: turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp Check out Kansai-WWW, too ------------> http://pclsp2.kuicr.kyoto-u.ac.jp/