This will probably look like spam but it's more of a 'news of the day' thing.
First I want to point you to this
Pascal externals compiler for Livecode , its the second link down, under the free Runtime Revolution or Livecode starter guide.
Here's a direct link to the
Pascal SDK pageYou can get the free Livecode IDE
hereThis is 99 Bottles of Beer in Livecode for you to get an idea of how it scripts.
Of course a third of the strength of the IDE is the wealth GUI tools that will run on many platforms.
constant singAlong=1
local bottles=99
on openCard
DrinkThem
end openCard
on DrinkThem
switch bottles
case 0
put "There were no more bottles of beer on the wall" into field "song"
wait (singAlong * 2) seconds
quit
break
case 1
put "One last bottle of beer on the wall." & return into field "song"
put "Take it down and pass it around." after field "song"
wait singAlong seconds
break
default
put bottles && "bottles of beer on the wall." & return into field "song"
put "Take one down and pass it around." after field "song"
end switch
subtract 1 from bottles
send DrinkThem to me in singAlong seconds
end DrinkThem
We used to make an 3D OpenGL Lua external for it when it cost $250 to $1000
a license and we got it for free by winning some game dev contests.
Looked like thisIt still works but I don't know enough about C or building externals to develop it.
What else? oh.
ZedCode The Lua Z80 EmulatorRetro games hardware crowd is searching for devs to make games for their old hardware.
The existence of reasonable IDE's for such a task is of course at an absolute minimal.
And then there is
Javascript MESS mutliple machine emulator in a browser.
With old hardware being online in the cloud now, there's all new possibilities for the retro game development enthusiast.
You'll make a little game with minimal complexity and code in some something like EGSL and then run a batch
script to compiled it to roms or cassette files whatever for for 10 different z80 systems and post those to
Archive.org's Software Collection for starters.
Speaking of Archive.org, yesterday I posted the fan reproduced
Aquarius Guide To Home Computing and
Aquarius Home Computer System Extended Microsoft BASIC Cartridge Instructionsin super slick HTML and other formats for retro computer programming fans around the world.
Did you know about
Pentacom BitFontMaker2 online bitmap font design software? Pretty cool tool.
There's some other stuff I lost in a post two nights ago when I was here posting a big post and closed the browser windows.
But now I forgot what it was.