Yes, that's all correct. Although Microsoft now simply calls it the
Windows API, it used to be called Win32.
At Thu, 22 Sep 2011 22:34:47 -0700, John Clements wrote:
On Sep 22, 2011, at 10:22 PM, Neil Van Dyke wrote:
Matthew or someone can give an authoritative answer, but if this lets you
In distributing compiled binaries for Windows, I'm trying to cover all of the
bases for the required DLLs. As far as I can tell from Visual Studio 2010,
there are only two flavors, 32-bit and 64-bit. However, I see that on at least
one of my students' machines, the system-library-subpath
Matthew or someone can give an authoritative answer, but if this lets
you sleep tonight... I suspect the win32 in Racket is fine, and that
Visual Studio just has a backward-compatibility awkwardness in naming.
Win32 was the name of one of the generations of Windows API, and I
believe that
On Sep 22, 2011, at 10:22 PM, Neil Van Dyke wrote:
Matthew or someone can give an authoritative answer, but if this lets you
sleep tonight... I suspect the win32 in Racket is fine, and that Visual
Studio just has a backward-compatibility awkwardness in naming.
Win32 was the name of one
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