Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view test/testtypes.c @ 1125:a6011e1394d9
Apparently MacOS X will sometimes pass command line arguments to a Cocoa
app as an openFile() message, so we have to make sure we were launched from
the Finder before accepting these as drag'n'drop documents, or they will just
duplicate what's already in argc/argv.
author | Ryan C. Gordon <icculus@icculus.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 22 Aug 2005 14:18:15 +0000 |
parents | 45b1c4303f87 |
children | d93862a3d821 |
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#include <stdio.h> #include "SDL_main.h" #include "SDL_types.h" int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int error = 0; int verbose = 1; if ( argv[1] && (strcmp(argv[1], "-q") == 0) ) verbose = 0; if ( sizeof(Uint8) != 1 ) { if ( verbose ) printf("sizeof(Uint8) != 1, instead = %d\n", sizeof(Uint8)); ++error; } if ( sizeof(Uint16) != 2 ) { if ( verbose ) printf("sizeof(Uint16) != 2, instead = %d\n", sizeof(Uint16)); ++error; } if ( sizeof(Uint32) != 4 ) { if ( verbose ) printf("sizeof(Uint32) != 4, instead = %d\n", sizeof(Uint32)); ++error; } #ifdef SDL_HAS_64BIT_TYPE if ( sizeof(Uint64) != 8 ) { if ( verbose ) printf("sizeof(Uint64) != 8, instead = %d\n", sizeof(Uint64)); ++error; } #else if ( verbose ) { printf("WARNING: No 64-bit datatype on this platform\n"); } #endif if ( verbose && ! error ) printf("All data types are the expected size.\n"); return( error ? 1 : 0 ); }