Angband 3.3.0 is out
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Unless they are class names or character has same name as previous one.Comment
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Thanks! There are at least a few of us OSX-ers out here.I did a slow, but not terribly detailed pass through the help files while updating qwerty's LaTeX source to match the help files. I undoubtedly missed things, though. I'd greatly appreciate anyone else's looking through the help files and/or the manual for inaccuracies. As Magnate said, we hope to have just one set of source files for documentation by 3.4.
I've built a 3.3.0 OSX dmg; it should be on rephial as soon as someone with access uploads it.Comment
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I know. Now, if someone with real OSX programming knowledge were to come along, the port might be in somewhat better shape.
There are still a few places where the code needs cleaning, and I have a suspicion that, since I built it on 10.6 Intel, people with 10.4 PPC machines will still have problems running it. I would love to hear positive or negative reports about that.
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I should be able to try it on a 10.4 Intel- I'll have to see if my old PPC powerbook still works. Is there anything in particular that you expect to be problematic?I know. Now, if someone with real OSX programming knowledge were to come along, the port might be in somewhat better shape.
There are still a few places where the code needs cleaning, and I have a suspicion that, since I built it on 10.6 Intel, people with 10.4 PPC machines will still have problems running it. I would love to hear positive or negative reports about that.Comment
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It will probably crash at startup. That's what other people were seeing, at least. If you have XCode installed, I would happily accept a build from source of 3.3.0, especially on a 10.4 PPC. That *should* run everywhere. I have yet to discern the compiler flags or other modifications that permit me to make a similar build on a >10.5 Intel machine.Comment
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I should be able to check it out tomorrow, and see if my older laptop still boots. I'll need some serious hand-holding though, I probably have xcode but I haven't done much of anything with it besides an aborted attempt at some applescript a long long time ago.It will probably crash at startup. That's what other people were seeing, at least. If you have XCode installed, I would happily accept a build from source of 3.3.0, especially on a 10.4 PPC. That *should* run everywhere. I have yet to discern the compiler flags or other modifications that permit me to make a similar build on a >10.5 Intel machine.Comment
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It should be pretty straightforward.
- Download the source
- Open Terminal.app
- cd to the directory containing the source tarball
- Run tar xzpf angband-v3.3.0.tar.gz
- Run cd angband-v3.3.0/src
- Run make -f Makefile.osx
The app bundle should then be in your parent directory, if all went well.Comment
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inline help
I prefer an inline help. Opening PDF means, acrobat application starts up, another window where i need to use the mouse. Too much hazzle, compared to a simple inline help.Originally posted by fph
do we need a plain-old-ASCII inline help where there's a professionally formatted PDF sitting around in the same directory?
I do agree that keeping two help sources up-to-date is a pain tho.
Cheers,
TibariusBlondes are more fun!Comment
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If I would need to choose between the two, I would choose inline help.Comment
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www.mediafire.com/buzzkill - Get your 32x32 tiles here. UT32 now compatible Ironband and Quickband 9/6/2012.
My banding life on Buzzkill's ladder.Comment
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