| [7] | 1 | XWP Helpers 0.9.6 README
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 | 2 | (W) Ulrich Mller, October 26, 2000
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 | 3 | Last updated October 26, 2000, Ulrich Mller
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 | 4 | 
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 | 5 | 
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 | 6 | 0. CONTENTS OF THIS FILE
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 | 7 | ========================
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 | 8 | 
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 | 9 |     1. LICENSE, COPYRIGHT, DISCLAIMER
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 | 10 |     2. INTRODUCTION
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 | 11 |     3. CREATING CODE DOCUMENTATION
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 | 12 |     4. COMPILING
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 | 13 |     5. INCLUDING HEADER FILES
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 | 14 | 
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 | 15 | 
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 | 16 | 1. LICENSE, COPYRIGHT, DISCLAIMER
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 | 17 | =================================
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 | 18 | 
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 | 19 |     Copyright (C) 1997-2000 Ulrich Mller,
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 | 20 |                             Christian Langanke,
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 | 21 |                             and others (see the individual source files).
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 | 22 | 
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 | 23 |     This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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 | 24 |     it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as contained in
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 | 25 |     the file COPYING in this distribution.
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 | 26 | 
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 | 27 |     This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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 | 28 |     but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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 | 29 |     MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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 | 30 | 
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 | 31 | 
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 | 32 | 2. INTRODUCTION
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 | 33 | ===============
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 | 34 | 
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 | 35 |     Welcome to the XWorkplace Helpers.
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 | 36 | 
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 | 37 |     This CVS archive is intended to support OS/2 developers with any
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 | 38 |     code they might need writing OS/2 programs.
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 | 39 | 
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 | 40 |     The XWPHelpers are presently used in XWorkplace and WarpIN. They
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 | 41 |     started out from various code snippets I created for XFolder,
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 | 42 |     the predecessor of XWorkplace. I then isolated the code which could
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 | 43 |     be used independently and put that code into separate directories
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 | 44 |     in the WarpIN CVS repository (also at Netlabs).
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 | 45 | 
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 | 46 |     At Warpstock Europe 2000 in Karlsruhe, I talked to a number of
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 | 47 |     developers and then decided that this should become an independent
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 | 48 |     Netlabs CVS archive so that other people can more easily contribute.
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 | 49 | 
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 | 50 |     Even though the helpers are called "XWorkplace helpers", they
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 | 51 |     have nothing to do with WPS and SOM programming. They can help
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 | 52 |     any OS/2 programmer.
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 | 53 | 
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 | 54 |     The XWPHelpers offer you frequently used code for writing all
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 | 55 |     sorts of OS/2 programs, including:
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 | 56 | 
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 | 57 |     --  standard C code which is independent of the OS/2 platform;
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 | 58 | 
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 | 59 |     --  OS/2-specific code which can be used in any OS/2 program
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 | 60 |         (text mode or PM);
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 | 61 | 
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 | 62 |     --  PM-specific code which assists you in writing PM programs.
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 | 63 | 
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 | 64 |     The XWPHelpers can be compiled with EMX/GCC or IBM VisualAge
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 | 65 |     C++ 3.08. They can be used with C or C++ programs.
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 | 66 | 
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 | 67 | 
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 | 68 |     Getting Sources from Netlabs CVS
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 | 69 |     --------------------------------
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 | 70 | 
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 | 71 |     First set the CVS enviroment:
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 | 72 |         CVSROOT=:pserver:guest@www.netlabs.org:d:/netlabs.src/xwphelpers
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 | 73 |         USER=guest
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 | 74 | 
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 | 75 |     Then, to check out the most current XWPHelpers sources, create
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 | 76 |     a subdirectory in your CVS root dir called "xwphelpers".
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 | 77 | 
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 | 78 |     Do a "cvs login" with "readonly" as your password and do a
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 | 79 |     "cvs checkout ." from the "xwphelpers" subdirectory. Don't forget
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 | 80 |     the dot.
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 | 81 | 
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 | 82 |     Alternatively, use the Netlabs Open Source Archive Client (NOSAC).
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 | 83 |     See http://www.netlabs.org/nosa for details.
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 | 84 | 
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 | 85 |     In any case, I strongly recommend to create a file in $(HOME)
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 | 86 |     called ".cvsrc" and add "cvs -z9" in there to enable maximum
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 | 87 |     compression during transfers. This greatly speeds up things.
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 | 88 | 
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 | 89 | 
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 | 90 | 3. CREATING CODE DOCUMENTATION
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 | 91 | ==============================
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 | 92 | 
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 | 93 |     The XWPHelpers do not come with pre-made documentation. However,
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 | 94 |     you can automatically have documentation generated from the sources
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 | 95 |     using my "xdoc" utility, which resides in the main directory of
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 | 96 |     the helpers. (The source code for xdoc is in the WarpIN CVS
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 | 97 |     repository because it shares some C++ code with WarpIN.)
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 | 98 | 
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 | 99 |     To have the code generated, call "createdoc.cmd" in the main
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 | 100 |     directory. This will call xdoc in turn with the proper parameters
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 | 101 |     and create a new "HTML" directory, from where you should start
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 | 102 |     with the "index.html" file.
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 | 103 | 
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 | 104 | 
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 | 105 | 4. COMPILING
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 | 106 | ============
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 | 107 | 
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 | 108 |     Compiling is a bit tricky because the code and the makefiles
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 | 109 |     were designed to be independent of any single project. As a
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 | 110 |     result, I had to used environment variables in order to pass
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 | 111 |     parameters to the makefiles.
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 | 112 | 
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 | 113 |     The most important environment variable is PROJECT_BASE_DIR.
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 | 114 |     This should point to the root directory of your own project.
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 | 115 |     In this directory, src\helpers\makefile expects a file called
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 | 116 |     "setup.in" which sets up more environment variables. You can
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 | 117 |     take the one from the XWPHelpers makefile as a template.
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 | 118 | 
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 | 119 |     See the top of src\helpers\makefile for additional variables.
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 | 120 | 
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 | 121 |     Of course, nothing stops you from writing your own makefile
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 | 122 |     if you find all this to complicated. However, if you choose
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 | 123 |     to use my makefile from within your own project, you can
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 | 124 |     then simply change to the src\helpers directory and start a
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 | 125 |     second nmake from your own makefile like this:
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 | 126 | 
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 | 127 |         @cd xxx\src\helpers
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 | 128 |         nmake -nologo "PROJECT_BASE_DIR=C:\myproject" "MAINMAKERUNNING=YES"
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 | 129 |         @cd olddir
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 | 130 | 
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 | 131 | 
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 | 132 | 5. INCLUDING HEADER FILES
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 | 133 | =========================
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 | 134 | 
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 | 135 |     The "include policy" of the helpers is that the "include"
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 | 136 |     directory in the helpers source tree should be part of your
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 | 137 |     include path. This way you can include helper headers in
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 | 138 |     your own project code using
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 | 139 | 
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 | 140 |         #include "helpers\header.h"
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 | 141 | 
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 | 142 |     so that the helpers headers won't interfere with your own
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 | 143 |     headers.
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 | 144 | 
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 | 145 | 
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 | 146 | 
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