07-07-2019
These are great posts! Thanks.
I used to love to program on the Amiga, including the years when I was a land surveyor and wrote a lot of land surveying programs on the Amiga (as well as a Tandy TRS 80 as I recall) which I used in my business, and your posts brings back fond, distant memories.
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
Hi guys and gals...
Who still plays with the AMIGA in any of its guises?
I have a classic A1200(HD) on 24/7 and still build and code for it...
Also _clones_ of the same machine using WinUAE and E-UAE...
It still has that one major beauty for this 62 year old - moi - it is FUN! ;o) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
2 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
Well I wrote this in 2005 and uploaded to AMINET.as a commemoration of a machine that is still in use today.
It is now 29 years since this machne came into being. Phenominal and it is still being supported- WOW!
My A1200 is on 24/7 and I use it to test code developed on AMIGA emulators...
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
0 Replies
3. News, Links, Events and Announcements
Hi guys...
For the AMIGA fans out there...
Not sure if this is the right forum but someone has done a successful working port of gcc for the classic AMIGA A1200.
It contains a very large subset of *NIX commands and now AMIGA fanatics like me can include another platform, within the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
0 Replies
4. OS X (Apple)
I don't know if anyone is interested but I have been meddling with FFT for the AMIGA.
(Sadly we AMIGAns don't have these luxuries through any scripting language.
Below is a Python snippet that uses the builtin 'cmath' module to work with the lowly
Python 2.0.1 for the AMIGA. It is part of a... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
0 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
Hi everybody...
Anyone who sees posts from me see the word AMIGA on my machines' terminal prompts.
AMINET is the oldest Internet SW repository and currently holds 82,800+ freely available SW packages.
About Aminet - AminetWiki
I am a member of LAG, (Linclonshire Amiga Group), in the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
python2.7-config
PYTHON-CONFIG(1) General Commands Manual PYTHON-CONFIG(1)
NAME
python-config - output build options for python C/C++ extensions or embedding
SYNOPSIS
python-config [ --prefix ] [ --exec-prefix ] [ --includes ] [ --libs ] [ --cflags ] [ --ldflags ] [ --help ]
DESCRIPTION
python-config helps compiling and linking programs, which embed the Python interpreter, or extension modules that can be loaded dynamically
(at run time) into the interpreter.
OPTIONS
--cflags
print the C compiler flags.
--ldflags
print the flags that should be passed to the linker.
--includes
similar to --cflags but only with -I options (path to python header files).
--libs similar to --ldflags but only with -l options (used libraries).
--prefix
prints the prefix (base directory) under which python can be found.
--exec-prefix
print the prefix used for executable program directories (such as bin, sbin, etc).
--help print the usage message.
EXAMPLES
To build the singe-file c program prog against the python library, use
gcc $(python-config --cflags --ldflags) progr.cpp -o progr.cpp
The same in a makefile:
CFLAGS+=$(shell python-config --cflags)
LDFLAGS+=$(shell python-config --ldflags)
all: progr
To build a dynamically loadable python module, use
gcc $(python-config --cflags --ldflags) -shared -fPIC progr.cpp -o progr.so
SEE ALSO
python (1)
http://docs.python.org/extending/extending.html
/usr/share/doc/python/faq/extending.html
AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Johann Felix Soden <johfel@gmx.de> for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
November 27, 2011 PYTHON-CONFIG(1)