abstract
| - Below is the full text to config.h from the source code of Hack 1.0. To link to a particular line, write [[Hack 1.0/config.h#line123]], for example. Warning! This is the source code from an old release. For the latest release, see Source code 1. /* Copyright (c) Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam, 1984. */ 2. 3. #ifndef CONFIG /* make sure the compiler doesnt see the typedefs twice */ 4. 5. #define CONFIG 6. #define VAX /* to get proper struct initialization */ 7. #define BSD /* delete this line on System V */ 8. /* #define STUPID */ /* avoid some complicated expressions if 9. your C compiler chokes on them */ 10. 11. #define WIZARD "play" /* the person allowed to use the -w option */ 12. #define NEWS "news" /* the file containing the latest hack news */ 13. #define FMASK 0660 /* file creation mask */ 14. 15. #define OPTIONS /* do not delete the 'o' command */ 16. #define SHELL /* do not delete the '!' command */ 17. #define TRACK /* do not delete the tracking properties of monsters */ 18. 19. /* size of terminal screen is (ROWNO+2) by COLNO */ 20. #define COLNO 80 21. #define ROWNO 22 22. 23. /* 24. * small signed integers (8 bits suffice) 25. * typedef char schar; 26. * will do when you have signed characters; otherwise use 27. * typedef short int schar; 28. */ 29. typedef char schar; 30. 31. /* 32. * small unsigned integers (8 bits suffice - but 7 bits do not) 33. * - these are usually object types; be careful with inequalities! - 34. * typedef unsigned char uchar; 35. * will be satisfactory if you have an "unsigned char" type; otherwise use 36. * typedef unsigned short int uchar; 37. */ 38. typedef unsigned char uchar; 39. 40. /* 41. * small integers in the range 0 - 127, usually coordinates 42. * although they are nonnegative they must not be declared unsigned 43. * since otherwise comparisons with signed quantities are done incorrectly 44. * (thus, in fact, you could make xchar equal to schar) 45. */ 46. typedef char xchar; 47. typedef xchar boolean; /* 0 or 1 */ 48. #define TRUE 1 49. #define FALSE 0 50. 51. /* 52. * Declaration of bitfields in various structs; if your C compiler 53. * doesnt handle bitfields well, e.g., if it is unable to initialize 54. * structs containing bitfields, then you might use 55. * #define Bitfield(x,n) xchar x 56. * since the bitfields used never have more than 7 bits. (Most have 1 bit.) 57. */ 58. #define Bitfield(x,n) unsigned x:n 59. 60. #endif CONFIG
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