open-watcom-v2
winevdm
open-watcom-v2 | winevdm | |
---|---|---|
23 | 116 | |
921 | 2,445 | |
2.6% | - | |
9.9 | 7.9 | |
1 day ago | 16 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
open-watcom-v2
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Djgpp
https://github.com/open-watcom/open-watcom-v2
In terms of ISO-complianceness, perhaps don't expect much. It basically C89 (the C99 support is still incomplete), and for C++... most likely not even C++98 - compliant.
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Popularity of DOS/4GW made Win95 game compat easier, but with higher stakes
> You will also want to start with a 16-bit C compiler like Borland Turbo C or Microsoft C
The parent post mentioned they're going to use OpenWatcom which is an actively developed[0] C and C++ compiler that targets 16bit DOS (among others).
[0] https://github.com/open-watcom/open-watcom-v2
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#pragma once / header guards / C++ committee.
Despite the lack of feature support, the compiler is still updated to this day, and still does support DOS, Windows, Linux, and OS/2, so it's modern in the sense of maintenance, just not really standards support. If you got further questions, I can send you the Discord link. They are pretty friendly.
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Rust is Boring
My advice is, when you feel you need that challenge, install DOSBox or DOSBox-X and Open Watcom C/C++, DJGPP, or gcc-ia16 and do some retro-programming. You'll also get the fun of being able to do low-level hardware twiddling and rely on DOS being so simple that it's effectively an RTOS.
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Build C/C++ programs to run on homebrew 286?
If you want to build under Linux, I would recommend you look at Open Watcom. It's the best open source 16-bit x86 C compiler, IMHO.
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"My Reaction to Dr. Stroustrup’s Recent Memory Safety Comments"
I have recently found out that Watcom C still exists. And not just exists, but there are plenty of commits.
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Win16 Retro Development
I should note, that OpenWatcom 2.0[1] is far better for supporting more recent C and C++ code, modern hosts and tooling, but still able to compile into 16 bit code. It is also actively maintained. Instead of MASM I recommend JWasm[2] + Jwlink[3]. Back in time I did a fork[4] of JWasm that has cleaner build system (CMake).
[1] https://github.com/open-watcom/open-watcom-v2
[2] https://github.com/Baron-von-Riedesel/JWasm
[3] https://github.com/JWasm/JWlink
[4] https://github.com/JWasm/JWasm
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Rendering like it's 1996 - Baby's first pixel
If you want to run this in DOS: the code under src/should actually compile with this OpenWatcom fork via the -za99 flag. MiniFB however will not compile. You'd have to palettize the output pixel buffer to 256 colors and then blit it to 0xa000if you fancy that.
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Falsehoods programmers believe about undefined behavior
GCC, clang or maybe watcom? You wouldn't find it there (before invention of AGI, but that would be entirely different can of worms).
- Having trouble setting up whonix on Mac OS
winevdm
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Winlator: Android app that lets you to run Windows apps with Wine
Not exactly what you were asking, but winevdm [0] does use code from Wine to run 16-bit Windows applications on 64-bit Windows installs that don't support it natively (via ntvdm).
[0] - https://github.com/otya128/winevdm
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"LibreOffice is better at reading old Word files than Word"
https://github.com/otya128/winevdm run 16 bit apps on 64 windows
This, along with Windows's own compatibility mode tweaks, should run almost any game that has ever been released on Windows.
- 29 years ago today I went online. Netscape Navigator 1.0 was the tool I loved
- Anyone ever play Castle of the Winds?
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SimCity Classic - Guide to Installation (Windows / DOSBox)
WineVDM: https://github.com/otya128/winevdm/releases
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Show HN: WinGPT, AI Assistant for Windows 3.1
It could work with the help with otvdm: https://github.com/otya128/winevdm
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Free Tech Tools and Resources - Mac Scrolling, Load Testing, Win Server Switch Tip & More
You can repeat this command as many times as you need to for additional records. More information can be found here. Total downtime in a VMWare environment is less than five minutes, barring any DNS server replication in play." Yet Another Free Tool winevdm enables you to keep old Windows programs on life support by running 16-bit Windows (1.x, 2.x, 3.0, 3.1, etc.) on a 64-bit Windows system. Ojakobe explains, "Had a special case of a user who clung to their Windows 7 PC because their work was reliant on a 16-bit program from 1997 (and even on 7 it didn't run properly). Used the program above to make it run reliably on 10." One Final Free Tool LocalAI is a self-hosted, OpenAI-compatible API that allows you to run language learning models locally or on-prem using consumer-grade hardware without the need for GPUs. This RESTful API supports multiple model families that are compatible with ggml format. Our thanks go to mudler_it for this one.
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IT Pro Tuesday #255 - Mac Scrolling, Load Testing, Win Server Switch Tip & More
winevdm enables you to keep old Windows programs on life support by running 16-bit Windows (1.x, 2.x, 3.0, 3.1, etc.) on a 64-bit Windows system. Ojakobe explains, "Had a special case of a user who clung to their Windows 7 PC because their work was reliant on a 16-bit program from 1997 (and even on 7 it didn't run properly). Used the program above to make it run reliably on 10."
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Anyone know how to get ActiveSync on windows 10?
After that you should now be able to install software. One final sticking point is that some older programs are wrapped up in 16-bit installers, however these can be installed by running the installer with something like otvdm.
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Why won't this run on my windows 11 pc?
Try WineVDM because NTvdm never got a port to 64-bit since the CPU mode it relied on for fast 16-bit code execution gets disabled when a x86 processor is switched into long mode. WineVDM is likely translating 16-bit instruction calls to 32-bit and then passing that off to Windows
What are some alternatives?
gcc-ia16 - Fork of Lambertsen & Jenner (& al.)'s IA-16 (Intel 16-bit x86) port of GNU compilers ― added far pointers & more • use https://github.com/tkchia/build-ia16 to build • Ubuntu binaries at https://launchpad.net/%7Etkchia/+archive/ubuntu/build-ia16/ • DJGPP/MS-DOS binaries at https://gitlab.com/tkchia/build-ia16/-/releases • mirror of https://gitlab.com/tkchia/gcc-ia16
OTVDM - Windows/DOS emulator -> https://github.com/otya128/winevdm
DOOM - DOOM Open Source Release
dosbox-x - DOSBox-X fork of the DOSBox project
MS-DOS - The original sources of MS-DOS 1.25 and 2.0, for reference purposes
ntvdmx64 - Run Microsoft Windows NTVDM (DOS) on 64bit Editions
em-dosbox - An Emscripten port of DOSBox
abrash-black-book - Markdown source for Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book
ScpToolkit - Windows Driver and XInput Wrapper for Sony DualShock 3/4 Controllers
emu2 - Simple x86 and DOS emulator for the Linux terminal.
DS4Windows - Like those other ds4tools, but sexier