The Apple2 doesn't have sprites so the Apple2 mouse callbacks place a special character on the text screen to indicate the mouse position. In order to support the necessary character removing and redrawing the Apple2 mouse driver called the Apple2 mouse callbacks in an "unusual way". So far so (sort of) good.
However the upcoming Atari mouse driver aims to support both "sprite-type" mouse callbacks as well as "text-char-type" mouse callbacks. Therefore the interface between mouse drivers and callbacks needs to be extended to allow the mouse callbacks to hide their different types from the mouse driver.
The nature of this change can be seen best by looking at the Apple2 file modifications. The CBM drivers and callbacks (at least the current ones) don't benefit from this change.
The CBM510 runs programs in a non-system memory bank. It has its own zero page. Some things are copied from the system zero page; but, the cursor flags weren't copied. So, the cursor always blinked. That bug sometimes left cursor ghosts (reversed spaces) at the end of lines.
Occasionally dynamically drivers suffer from not being to refer to
content in the C library. Therefore I added a mechanism to allow
a C library for a certian target to define a symbol that will be
handed over to dynamic drivers for that target. Then the drivers
can use their refernce to that symbol to access content in the C
library.
- No complex shell logic.
- "Source file shadowing" for all targets via vpath.
- Dependency handling.
- True incremental build.
- Don't write into source directories.
- Easy cleanup by just removing 'wrk'.
- No complex shell logic.
- "Source file shadowing" for all targets via vpath.
- Dependency handling.
- True incremental build.
- Don't write into source directories.
- Easy cleanup by just removing 'wrk'.
machines, the program runs in a separate 64K bank, and zeropage variables need
to be copied from the system bank into the execution bank to read by a simple
load operation. The change is currently untested!
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4597 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
named EXEHDR.
* Renamed BASICHDR to EXEHDR for the PET-II machines.
* Moved the call to CHRCH in front of the code that saves the zero page, since
open files are sometimes remembered in the zero page, so we need to close
them before we grab a copy.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4507 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
in the distribution.
Added --forget-inc-paths to the command line of the assembler in the
Makefiles, because the assembler does now have builtin paths and will find
include files from an installation first.
Hopefully fixed any problems that arose from the two changes.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4223 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
program. The standard driver and mode is the first one in the tgi_mode_table.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4153 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
main() is encountered. Define this symbol in the startup code. This will
automatically force linking of the startup code which can then reside inside
the standard library as any other object file.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@3988 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
routine reads the TOD clock of CIA1 on the C64 and C128. Since systime was a
dummy routine common for all CBMs before, this change adds an individual dummy
routine for all other CBM systems. CBM510/610 do also have a TOD clock, so a
similar function as in the C64 could be used ...
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@3974 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
before calling initlib because initlib calls contructors and may install
drivers, which enable hardware interrupts. Similar for donelib.
See also R3897 and R3951 where this change was done for other platforms.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@3954 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81