Difference between revisions of "Portability issues"
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* Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonably portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like the solid blocks from the IBM DOS character set) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like the smileys from IBM DOS) will probably cause problems. | * Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonably portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like the solid blocks from the IBM DOS character set) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like the smileys from IBM DOS) will probably cause problems. | ||
** Extensions to ASCII are not portable. Unicode is portable, though, plus it includes all the old IBM DOS characters, though not necessarily at the same code points. | ** Extensions to ASCII are not portable. Unicode is portable, though, plus it includes all the old IBM DOS characters, though not necessarily at the same code points. | ||
* [[Output libraries]] discusses the options you have. | |||
== Filesystem == | == Filesystem == |
Revision as of 23:26, 6 February 2009
Portability Issues
The purpose of this article is to collect portability issues often encountered by roguelike programmers as well as possible solutions for these problems.
Memory
- Some Operating Systems, such as IRIX, allow the programs to read from a NULL address, while others will segfault instantly. Trying to write to a NULL address will hopefully always cause a segfault. (Except on many embedded systems. The Gameboy Advance, for example, will not segfault on a NULL address write.)
Display
- Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonably portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like the solid blocks from the IBM DOS character set) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like the smileys from IBM DOS) will probably cause problems.
- Extensions to ASCII are not portable. Unicode is portable, though, plus it includes all the old IBM DOS characters, though not necessarily at the same code points.
- Output libraries discusses the options you have.
Filesystem
- Some Operating Systems (such as any that derive from or pattern UNIX or follow POSIX standards) are case-sensitive as far as filenames are concerned. Others (like DOS or Windows) are case-insensitive. Still others (like HFS , in common use on OS X) preserve case but are insensitive to it. One shouldn't rely on any one case behavior to achieve maximum portability.
- There are Operating Systems that forbid use of certain characters within file names, most often path separators (e.g., colons in Classic MacOS). Other characters may require "escaping" in filename references.
- Operating Systems may also restrict filename length or the total length of an absolute filepath.
- DOS and Windows use backslash as their path separator while UNIX uses slash.