Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
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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 | e044e7c70a50 |
children | 4f896c20caf6 |
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<HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>Using SDL with Microsoft Visual C++</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <H1> Using SDL with Microsoft Visual C++ 5,6 and 7 </H1> <H3> by <A HREF="mailto:snowlion@sprynet.com">Lion Kimbro </A>and additions by <A HREF="mailto:james@conceptofzero.net"> James Turk</A> </H3> <p> You can either use the precompiled libraries from <A HREF="http://www.libsdl.org/download.php"> the SDL Download web site </A>, or you can build SDL yourself. </p> <H3> Building SDL </H3> <P> Unzip the <CODE>VisualC.zip</CODE> file into the directory that contains this file (<CODE>VisualC.html</CODE>). </P> <P> Be certain that you unzip the zip file for your compiler into <strong>this</strong> directory and not any other directory. If you are using WinZip, be careful to make sure that it extracts to <strong>this</strong> folder, because it's convenient feature of unzipping to a folder with the name of the file currently being unzipped will get you in trouble if you use it right now. And that's all I have to say about that. </P> <P> Now that it's unzipped, go into the VisualC directory that is created, and double-click on the VC++ file "<CODE>SDL.dsw</CODE>"<STRONG><FONT color="#009900"> ("<CODE>SDL.sln</CODE>").</FONT></STRONG> This should open up the IDE. </P> <P> You may be prompted at this point to upgrade the workspace, should you be using a more recent version of Visual C++. If so, allow the workspace to be upgraded. </P> <P> Build the <CODE>.dll</CODE> and <CODE>.lib</CODE> files. </P> <P> This is done by right clicking on each project in turn (Projects are listed in the Workspace panel in the FileView tab), and selecting "Build". </P> <P> You may get a few warnings, but you should not get any errors. You do have to have at least the DirectX 5 SDK installed, however. The latest version of DirectX can be downloaded or purchased on a cheap CD (my recommendation) from <A HREF="http://www.microsoft.com">Microsoft </A>. </P> <P> Later, we will refer to the following .lib and .dll files that have just been generated: </P> <ul> <li> SDL.dll</li> <li> SDL.lib</li> <li> SDLmain.lib</li> </ul> <P> Search for these using the Windows Find (Windows-F) utility, if you don't already know where they should be. For those of you with a clue, look inside the Debug or Release directories of the subdirectories of the Project folder. (It might be easier to just use Windows Find if this sounds confusing. And don't worry about needing a clue; we all need visits from the clue fairy frequently.) </P> <H3> Creating a Project with SDL </H3> <P> Create a project as a Win32 Application. </P> <P> Create a C++ file for your project. </P> <P> Set the C runtime to "Multi-threaded DLL" in the menu: <CODE>Project|Settings|C/C++ tab|Code Generation|Runtime Library </CODE>. </P> <P> Add the SDL <CODE>include</CODE> directory to your list of includes in the menu: <CODE>Project|Settings|C/C++ tab|Preprocessor|Additional include directories </CODE> . <br> <STRONG><FONT color="#009900">VC7 Specific: Instead of doing this I find it easier to add the include and library directories to the list that VC7 keeps. Do this by selecting Tools|Options|Projects|VC++ Directories and under the "Show Directories For:" dropbox select "Include Files", and click the "New Directory Icon" and add the [SDLROOT]\include directory (ex. If you installed to c:\SDL-1.2.5\ add c:\SDL-1.2.5\include). Proceed to change the dropbox selection to "Library Files" and add [SDLROOT]\lib.</FONT></STRONG> </P> <P> The "include directory" I am referring to is the <CODE>include</CODE> folder within the main SDL directory (the one that this HTML file located within). </P> <P> Now we're going to use the files that we had created earlier in the Build SDL step. </P> <P> Copy the following files into your Project directory: </P> <ul> <li> SDL.dll</li> </ul> <P> Add the following files to your project (It is not necessary to copy them to your project directory): </P> <ul> <li> SDL.lib </li> <li> SDLmain.lib</li> </ul> <P> (To add them to your project, right click on your project, and select "Add files to project") </P> <P><STRONG><FONT color="#009900">Instead of adding the files to your project it is more desireable to add them to the linker options: Project|Properties|Linker|Command Line and type the names of the libraries to link with in the "Additional Options:" box. Note: This must be done for each build configuration (eg. Release,Debug).</FONT></STRONG></P> <H3> SDL 101, First Day of Class </H3> <P> Now create the basic body of your project. The body of your program should take the following form: <CODE> <PRE> #include "SDL.h" int main( int argc, char* argv[] ) { // Body of the program goes here. return 0; } </PRE> </CODE> <P></P> <H3> That's it! </H3> <P> I hope that this document has helped you get through the most difficult part of using the SDL: installing it. Suggestions for improvements to this document should be sent to the writers of this document. </P> <P> Thanks to Paulus Esterhazy (pesterhazy@gmx.net), for the work on VC++ port. </P> <P> This document was originally called "VisualC.txt", and was written by <A HREF="mailto:slouken@libsdl.org"> Sam Lantinga</A>. </P> <P> Later, it was converted to HTML and expanded into the document that you see today by <A HREF="mailto:snowlion@sprynet.com">Lion Kimbro</A>. </P> <P>Minor Fixes and Visual C++ 7 Information (In Green) was added by <A HREF="mailto:james@conceptofzero.net">James Turk</A> </P> </BODY> </HTML>