view Xcode/SDL/pkg-support/resources/ReadMeDevLite.txt @ 4734:0c7c67d4e6ee

Added On_Char method to Window_Listener for WM_CHAR messages. Removed a lot of TSF code because part of it was wrong and part was too complicated. Added Clear method to clear the window. IME input should work in both windowed mode and fullscreen mode with these changes. I have tested on Windows XP SP3 and Windows 7 Ultimate in VirtualBox. When you type a character (with an IME or not), the console will show the code point as U+XXXX. You use Left Alt+Shift (or whatever you have it set to) to switch input languages as usual. Hit ESC to exit (or close the window in windowed mode). The program will pause before exiting so you can review the console output (press a key to exit).
author dewyatt
date Wed, 09 Jun 2010 00:03:54 -0400
parents d63e9f5944ae
children
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This directory is for developers. This directory contains some basic essentials you will need for developing SDL based applications on OS X. The SDL-devel package contains all of this stuff plus more, so you can ignore this if you install the SDL-devel.pkg. The SDL-devel package contains Project Builder/Xcode templates, SDL documentation, and different variations of SDLmain and NIB files for SDL.

To compile an SDL based application on OS X, SDLMain.m must be compiled into your program. (See the SDL FAQ). The SDL-devel.pkg includes Project Builder/Xcode templates which already do this for you. But for those who may not want to install the dev package, an SDLMain is provided here as a convenience. Be aware that there are different variations of SDLMain.m depending on what class of SDL application you make and they are intended to work with NIB files. Only one SDLMain variant is provided here and without any NIB files. You should look to the SDL-devel package for the others. We currently do not provide a SDLMain.a file, partly to call to attention that there are different variations of SDLmain.

To build from the command line, your gcc line will look something like this:

gcc -I/Library/Frameworks/SDL.framework/Headers MyProgram.c SDLmain.m -framework SDL -framework Cocoa

An SDL/OpenGL based application might look like:

gcc -I/Library/Frameworks/SDL.framework/Headers -I/System/Library/Frameworks/OpenGL.framework/Headers MyProgram.c SDLmain.m -framework SDL -framework Cocoa -framework OpenGL