output (a comment from Recipe mistakenly got into the Unix
makefile); more importantly, lets mkfiles.pl run in up-to-date Perls
(where implicit split to @_ is now obsolete).
[originally from svn r8957]
$mw (it should only ever have been used in the Cygwin makefile), and
move the libraries to the end of the link line in the Unix makefile
for better portability.
[originally from svn r8853]
generates PPC/Intel dual-architecture binaries.
This turns out not to be too painful: you compile and link your
programs using `gcc -arch ppc' or `gcc -arch i386', then you use a
command of the form `lipo -create ppc-binary i386-binary -output
binary' to construct a universal binary. It works equally well on
command-line standalone executable files and the executables within
application directories. Also added the -mmacosx-version-min option,
since otherwise the OS X build tools appear to default to building
binaries which will crash (without anything resembling a
comprehensible error message) on any earlier release.
The handling of version.o in this checkin is somewhat grotty. I'd
prefer a method more cleverly intertwingled with mkfiles.pl so I
didn't have to maintain the OS X architecture list in both
mkfiles.pl and Recipe. (Not that I anticipate Apple switching
architectures again in the immediate future, but it's the principle
of the thing.)
[originally from svn r7916]
is mostly done with ifdefs in windows.c; so mkfiles.pl generates a
new makefile (Makefile.wce) and Recipe enables it, but it's hardly
any different from Makefile.vc apart from a few definitions at the
top of the files.
Currently the PocketPC build is not enabled in the build script, but
with any luck I'll be able to do so reasonably soon.
[originally from svn r7337]
mkfiles.pl change (I don't seem to be planning ahead very well this
week), this time to provide a list of fallback options for an object
file. That way, I have a no-icon.c which quietly replaces
icons/foo-icon.c if the latter doesn't exist, and so again people
checking straight out from Subversion shouldn't have trouble.
[originally from svn r7021]
Windows puzzle binaries. This checkin involves several distinct
changes:
- mkfiles.pl now has an extra feature: if an object file is listed
in Recipe with a trailing question mark, it will be considered
optional, and silently dropped from the makefile if its primary
source file isn't present at the time mkfiles.pl runs. This means
people who check out the puzzles from Subversion and just run
mkfiles.pl shouldn't get build failures; they just won't get the
icons.
- all the .R files now use this feature to include an optional
Windows resource file.
- the .rc resource source files are built by icons/Makefile.
- windows.c finds the icon if present and uses it in place of the
standard Windows application icon.
[originally from svn r7020]
when testing a new game, so here's a new architecture for the Recipe
file. mkfiles.pl now supports several new features:
- an `!include' directive, which accepts wildcards
- += to append to an existing object group definition
- the ability to divert output to an arbitrary file.
So now each puzzle has a `.R' file containing a fragment of Recipe
code describing that puzzle, and the central Recipe does `!include
*.R' to construct the Makefiles. That way, I can keep as many
experimental half-finished puzzles lying around my working directory
as I like, and I won't have to keep reverting Recipe when I check in
any other changes.
As part of this change, list.c is no longer a version-controlled
file; it's now constructed by mkfiles.pl, so that it too can take
advantage of this mechanism.
[originally from svn r6781]
$(XFLAGS) _after_ $(CFLAGS) on the compiler command lines, meaning
that you can provide options in XFLAGS on the makefile which will
override the ones in CFLAGS. For example, `make XFLAGS=-O0' to make
debugging easier.
[originally from svn r6123]
command-line programs (solosolver, patternsolver, mineobfusc) to be
built as part of the normal Makefiles. This means mkfiles.pl now has
the capability to compile a source file more than once with
different #defines. Also, fixes for those auxiliary programs and one
fix in midend.c which the Borland compiler objected to while I was
testing its makefile generation.
[originally from svn r6066]
ends. Versioning will be done solely by Subversion revision number,
since development on these puzzles is very incremental and gradual
and there don't tend to be obvious points to place numbered
releases.
[originally from svn r5781]
builds better:
- the GTK makefile now defines $(GTK_CONFIG) which you can
override, so you can build for GTK 2 with no makefile-editing
simply by running `make GTK_CONFIG="pkg_config gtk+-2.0"'
- we use Pango to find appropriate fonts, which means the text in
the puzzles actually (gasp!) adapts its size to the
circumstances. Unfortunately, I've been unable to do this
portably without depending on _either_ a Pango function that
isn't present in older versions _or_ the underlying window system
being X11; I'd appreciate someone doing better.
[originally from svn r5693]
platform-dependent code in puzzles.h (ick), which in turn depended
on the magic symbol MAC_OS_X being defined by mkfiles.pl itself
(yuck). Suddenly realised I can do much better simply by putting it
in an OS X makefile extras section in Recipe, and removing both
previous hacks. Much nicer.
[originally from svn r5191]
of the manual using Halibut (with one additional magic tag in the
<HEAD> section), stuck it in the right part of the application
bundle, referenced it in Info.plist, and added a Help menu.
Everything else was automatic. Not bad!
[originally from svn r5190]
Mac OS X application bundle, and provided an icon for Puzzles.
Also renamed the OS X source file from macosx.m to osx.m, so that it
can sit beside other things such as osx-info.plist and not cause
enormously long filenames.
[originally from svn r5179]
puzzles are compiled together into a single monolithic application
which allows you to select each one from one of its menus.
[originally from svn r5173]