I found the reason how it could find those .i files even though they are not on my hard drive, and how to get this install working easier (and correctly). It's covered in the follow up video. th-cam.com/video/pwwpqENWUSY/w-d-xo.html
Well, well, well, if it isn't Mr Amiga himself. Last night I got a couple of cans in, some snacks, all the neighbours crammed in for a watch party (okay, I'm exaggerating horrifically)...but no livestream. But that's okay! To drown my sorrows I watched bits of some of your older ones. I was surprised to see that, until perhaps 9 or 10 months ago, not a single one of today's regular livestream viewers were about. At least if they were, I didn't see them. It's almost like a travelling entertainer of old, passing through town after town for a night or two before moving on again, except it's the viewers who pass through. It's almost poetic. See you next time, when ever that may be.
Regarding the mystery include files: Try to just type "assign" in a shell, and maybe you will find that some other installation has already given you an artificial "include:" directory that devpac is just happily using.
I found the reason how it could find those .i files even though they are not on my hard drive, and how to get this install working easier (and correctly). It's covered in the follow up video. th-cam.com/video/pwwpqENWUSY/w-d-xo.html
Well, well, well, if it isn't Mr Amiga himself.
Last night I got a couple of cans in, some snacks, all the neighbours crammed in for a watch party (okay, I'm exaggerating horrifically)...but no livestream.
But that's okay!
To drown my sorrows I watched bits of some of your older ones. I was surprised to see that, until perhaps 9 or 10 months ago, not a single one of today's regular livestream viewers were about. At least if they were, I didn't see them.
It's almost like a travelling entertainer of old, passing through town after town for a night or two before moving on again, except it's the viewers who pass through. It's almost poetic.
See you next time, when ever that may be.
Loved Devpac 2/3 and TT on my Atari ST and TT. Great environment. Also loved HiSoft's X-Debug.
Yep. It was my first experience of an "IDE", although that wasn't a word back then.
Regarding the mystery include files: Try to just type "assign" in a shell, and maybe you will find that some other installation has already given you an artificial "include:" directory that devpac is just happily using.
I'll give that go, but even if there was a mystery assign, I searched the whole drive for one of those files and I couldn't find them.
10:30 root is : and btw you do not have to use cd to navigate paths :)
It's the MS-DOS reflexes kicking in!
There is someone still selling devpac. Do you have the ndk installed?
The include files I just used were the ones that came with it, so you would only be able to compile for up to workbench 2 with those.
@@DavePoo2 You said you didn't know how it assembled because you didn't copy the includes across, so did you have the ndk installed?
Not that I am aware of. I couldn't find any of the referenced include files on the drive.
th-cam.com/video/pwwpqENWUSY/w-d-xo.html - I found the reason how it could find those .i files. It's covered in this follow up video.