Re: [Freedos-devel] FreeDOS directory standard (1.1?)

2008-01-08 Thread Arkady V.Belousov
Hi! 8-Янв-2008 00:05 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Antony Gordon) wrote to : AG> In FreeDOS 1.1 (or whatever) once the directories are finalized, a system AG> variable can be declared in the OS (at the master environment level) like in AG> Windows NT/2000/XP called SYSTEMROOT. 1. In MS-DOS, all variables a

Re: [Freedos-devel] FreeDOS directory standard (1.1?)

2008-01-08 Thread Robert Riebisch
Jim Hall wrote: > I'm trying to remember if MSDOS does this, but my MSDOS books are > packed away. I think it did set a "DOS" environment variable, probably > starting in MSDOS 5.0. It didn't. Not even MS-DOS 6.22. Robert Riebisch -- BTTR Software http://www.bttr-software.de/ -

Re: [Freedos-devel] FreeDOS directory standard (1.1?)

2008-01-08 Thread Jim Hall
I prefer LIB and INCLUDE, not INC. Yes, that's the UNIX geek in me, but at least "lib" and "include" is already a standard in UNIX, so it makes sense for us to at least try to reuse it. May make porting UNIX apps to FreeDOS a little easier, if you don't have to modify a bunch of makefiles to use IN

Re: [Freedos-devel] FreeDOS directory standard (1.1?)

2008-01-08 Thread Jim Hall
On 1/8/08, Eric Auer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi Antony, > > > In FreeDOS 1.1 (or whatever) once the directories are finalized, a > > system variable can be declared in the OS (at the master environment > > level) like in Windows NT/2000/XP called SYSTEMROOT. On my Windows > > machine it's C:

Re: [Freedos-devel] FreeDOS directory standard (1.1?)

2008-01-08 Thread Eric Auer
Hi Antony, > In FreeDOS 1.1 (or whatever) once the directories are finalized, a > system variable can be declared in the OS (at the master environment > level) like in Windows NT/2000/XP called SYSTEMROOT. On my Windows > machine it's C:\WINDOWS. For FreeDOS it can be C:\FDOS. Then the other Thi