Difference between revisions of "Portability issues"

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* Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonable portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like solid blocks for walls) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like smileys) will probably cause problems.
* Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonable portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like solid blocks for walls) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like smileys) will probably cause problems.
* Extensions to ASCII are not portable.  Unicode is portable, though.


* Some OSs (like Linux) are case-sensitive as far as filenames are concerned others (like DOS or Windows) aren't. So don't rely on case-(in)sensitivity.
* Some OSs (like Linux) are case-sensitive as far as filenames are concerned others (like DOS or Windows) aren't. So don't rely on case-(in)sensitivity.


* Which characters are used to indicate the end of a line in textfiles is OS-specific. So be careful when parsing textfiles.
* Which characters are used to indicate the end of a line in textfiles is OS-specific. So be careful when parsing textfiles.
 
 
== Mac OS X ==
== Mac OS X ==



Revision as of 05:59, 3 February 2005

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.

General

  • Only the characters of the basic (7bit) ASCII character set are reasonable portable. Using characters from extended character sets (like solid blocks for walls) or characters which aren't classified as printable by the ASCII standard (like smileys) will probably cause problems.
* Extensions to ASCII are not portable.  Unicode is portable, though.
  • Some OSs (like Linux) are case-sensitive as far as filenames are concerned others (like DOS or Windows) aren't. So don't rely on case-(in)sensitivity.
  • Which characters are used to indicate the end of a line in textfiles is OS-specific. So be careful when parsing textfiles.

Mac OS X

  • The current version of the standard OS X terminal (Terminal.app) only supports 8 colors. Early versions of MacOS X curses did not support color at all.

DOS

  • Filenames are limited to 8 characters + a 3 characters extension. Additionally filenames must not contain whitespace or special characters.