On Sun, 24 May 2020 at 03:42, Richard Cini <rich.c...@verizon.net> wrote: > > Thanks Liam. Oberon is pretty interesting. I may download that just to see it > in action. I’ve used a ton of 3Com cards so the setup program is pretty > familiar. I haven’t used DESQview, well, since I had it installed on my > Compaq DeskPro 386/25. > > What I am looking for is code that actually uses the CoW library...like a > “Hello World!” for the library. I do plan on installing VB_DOS and play with > that too. I have no real project in mind for it though.
Oberon's definitely worth a look. Oberon also had some wider influence: Oberon's Text UI (TUI) inspired Acme, the Plan 9 editor/IDE/email client, and some of the Plan 9 UI in general. I have VB for DOS but I never wrapped my head around VB and its odd semi-OOPS. I was much happier in QB3 or QB4. Sadly, AFAICT, when the CUA-compliant, text-oriented windowing era came to DOS, I think that for the most part, everyone rolled their own. Borland's later-era DOS Pascal compilers made their toolkit available to users, which QB4 did not AFAIK. So there were apps in Borland TurboPascal that used them. This is my preferred console editor on Linux: https://os.ghalkes.nl/tilde/ I *think* the programmer re-implemented his own COW system but I'm not sure. Ask him? It replaced this: http://setedit.sourceforge.net/ Sadly not updated for modern Linux distros. It links to some info about COW libraries for Linux. BTW: I'd avoid that term if possible, as it overlaps with Copy-On-Write, a major modern filesystems feature. TUI is the term used in the Oberon context and is a bit more distinctive; the only overlap I know is a defunct travel company. -- Liam Proven – Profile: https://about.me/liamproven Email: lpro...@cix.co.uk – gMail/gTalk/gHangouts: lpro...@gmail.com Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn/Flickr: lproven – Skype: liamproven UK: +44 7939-087884 – ČR (+ WhatsApp/Telegram/Signal): +420 702 829 053