view README.Qtopia @ 1211:304d8dd6a989

To: sdl@libsdl.org From: Christian Walther <cwalther@gmx.ch> Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2005 12:13:20 +0100 Subject: [SDL] Fix for opening documents on Mac OS X < 10.4 The current code in SDLMain.m that transforms documents opened from the Finder into command-line arguments (introduced in revision 1.14, 2005-08-11) uses the methods -[NSString lengthOfBytesUsingEncoding:] and -[NSString getCString:maxLength:encoding:], which are only available in Mac OS X 10.4. Compiling this code on 10.3 produces warnings, and running it (i.e. starting an SDL application by opening a document) leads to weird behavior which I didn't investigate in detail ("*** -[NSCFString lengthOfBytesUsingEncoding:]: selector not recognized" is printed to the console log, and the SDL window never opens). The attached patch removes the offending calls and uses -[NSString UTF8String] instead, which is available everywhere. Tested on 10.3.9, and I see no reason why it shouldn't also work on 10.2 and 10.4. Two further comments: * The comment above the -[SDLMain application: openFile:] implementation says "You need to have a CFBundleDocumentsType section in your Info.plist to get this message, apparently." This is not the case in my experience - it worked just fine with a hand-built bare-bones application consisting only of Test.app/Contents/MacOS/test, without any Info.plist (although you have to press the option and command keys for such an application to accept a dragged file). * I took the liberty of cleaning up another area of SDLMain.m: I changed "CustomApplicationMain (argc, argv)" to "CustomApplicationMain (int argc, char **argv)". This avoids the "type of `argv' defaults to `int'" warnings, and I'm not sure if leaving out the types could cause problems on platforms where an int and a char** aren't of the same size. -Christian
author Ryan C. Gordon <icculus@icculus.org>
date Sun, 01 Jan 2006 23:45:52 +0000
parents 2c5d4c22a2ac
children
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==============================================================================
Using the Simple DirectMedia Layer with Qtopia/OPIE
==============================================================================

==============================================================================
I.  Setting up the Qtopia development environment.

  This document will not explain how to setup the Qtopia development
  environment. That is outside the scope of the document. You can read
  more on this subject in this excellent howto:

	http://www.zauruszone.com/howtos/linux_compiler_setup_howto.html

==============================================================================
II.  Building the Simple DirectMedia Layer libraries using the arm
     cross-compiler

  This is somewhat tricky since the name of the compiler binaries
  differ from the standard. Also you should disable features not
  needed. The command below works for me. Note that it's all one
  line. You can also set the NM, LD etc environment variables
  separately.

	NM=arm-linux-nm LD=arm-linux-ld CC=arm-linux-gcc CXX=arm-linux-g++ RANLIB=arm-linux-ranlib AR=arm-linux-ar ./configure --enable-video-qtopia --disable-video-dummy --disable-video-fbcon  --disable-video-dga --disable-arts --disable-esd --disable-alsa --disable-cdrom --disable-video-x11 --disable-nasm --prefix=/opt/Qtopia/sharp/ arm-unknown-linux-gnu

  One thing to note is that the above configure will include joystick
  support, even though you can't have joysticks on the Zaurus. The
  reason for this is to avoid link / compile / runtime errors with
  applications that have joystick support.

==============================================================================
III.  Building the Simple DirectMedia Layer test programs:

  After installing, making sure the correct sdl-config is in your
  path, run configure like this:

	NM=arm-linux-nm LD=arm-linux-ld CC=arm-linux-gcc CXX=arm-linux-g++ AR=arm-linux-ar ./configure arm-unknown-linux-gnu

==============================================================================
IV.  Application porting notes

  One thing I have noticed is that applications sometimes don't exit
  correctly. Their icon remains in the taskbar and they tend to
  relaunch themselves automatically. I believe this problem doesn't
  occur if you exit your application using the exit() method. However,
  if you end main() with 'return 0;' or so, this seems to happen.

  Also note that when running in landscape mode - i.e requesting a
  window that is HEIGHT pixels wide and WIDTH pixels high, where WIDTH
  and HEIGHT normally is 240 and 320 - the image is blitted so that
  the hardware buttons are on the left side of the display. This might
  not always be desirable but such is the code today.


==============================================================================
V.  Enjoy! :)

  If you have a project you'd like me to know about, or want to ask questions,
  go ahead and join the SDL developer's mailing list by sending e-mail to:

	sdl-request@libsdl.org

  and put "subscribe" into the subject of the message. Or alternatively you
  can use the web interface:

	http://www.libsdl.org/mailman/listinfo/sdl
  
==============================================================================
VI.  What is supported:

Keyboard (Sharp Zaurus)
Hardware buttons
Stylus input (mouse)
Video. Allows fullscreen both in portrait mode (up to WIDTHxHEIGHT
size window) and in landscape mode (up to HEIGHTxWIDTH). 

All other SDL functionality works like a normal Linux system (threads,
audio etc).

-- 
David Hedbor <david@hedbor.org>
http://david.hedbor.org/ 	http://eongames.com/