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Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oliver Schmidt
f8c6c58373 Made Apple II CONIO more flexible.
Originally the Apple II had a 64 char set and used the upper two bits to control inverse and blinking. The Apple //e brought then an alternate char set without blinking but more individual chars. However, it does _not_ contain 128 chars and use the upper bit to control inverse as one would assume. Rather it contains more than 128 chars - the MouseText chars. And because Apple wanted to provide as much backward compatibility as possible with the original char set, the alternate char set has a rather weird layout for chars > 128 with the inverse lowercase chars _not_ at (normal lowercase char + 128).

So far the Apple II CONIO implementation mapped chars 128-255 to chars 0-127 (with the exception of \r and \n). It made use of alternate chars > 128 transparently for the user via reverse(1). The user didn't have direct access to the MouseText chars, they were only used interally for things like chline() and cvline().

Now the mapping of chars 128-255 to 0-127 is removed. Using chars > 128 gives the user direct access to the "raw" alternate chars > 128. This especially give the use direct access to the MouseText chars. But this clashes with the exsisting (and still desirable) revers(1) logic. Combining reverse(1) with chars > 128 just doesn't result in anything usable!

What motivated this change? When I worked on the VT100 line drawing support for Telnet65 on the Apple //e (not using CONIO at all) I finally understood how MouseText is intended to be used to draw arbitrary grids with just three chars: A special "L" type char, the underscore and a vertical bar at the left side of the char box. I notice that with those chars it is possible to follow the CONIO approach to boxes and grids: Combining chline()/cvline() with special CH_... char constants for edges and intersections.

But in order to actually do so I needed to be able to define CH_... constants that when fed into the ordinary cputc() pipeline end up as MouseText chars. The obvious approach was to allow chars > 128 to directly access MouseText chars :-)

Now that the native CONIO box/grid approach works I deleted the Apple //e proprietary textframe() function that I added as replacement quite some years ago.

Again: Please note that chline()/cvline() and the CH... constants don't work with reverse(1)!
2018-08-20 00:30:17 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
94eb2a2ed7 Some fine tuning of the mouse driver interface harmonization. 2014-01-17 21:09:15 +01:00
Oliver Schmidt
4065cb1983 Harmonized interface between mouse drivers and callbacks.
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.
2014-01-15 22:47:59 +01:00
Oliver Schmidt
85885001b1 Removed (pretty inconsistently used) tab chars from source code base. 2013-05-09 13:57:12 +02:00
ol.sc
96b731dd96 Just presume alternate charset to be active on the //e - how shouldn't it if conio usage activates it.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4127 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
2009-09-07 14:00:17 +00:00
cuz
685235795c Apple 2 mouse driver and other stuff from Oliver Schmidt
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@3717 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
2006-04-06 19:51:37 +00:00