On Mon, 17 Jan 2005, Michael Riversong wrote:
> It is my understanding that you can write C code in a text file, and
> compile it using GCC in almost every distribution of Linux. The hard
> part is dependent files -- each distribution seems to have its own set.
This 'hard' part should be made le
Bible Companion XML AKA Bible Workshop uses the Mozilla Engine.
Bibleworkshop is still being supported, sorta, in the EU, however the
company that marketed Bible Companion is no longer doing business.
Phil
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As Michael noted, the norm in Linux is to develop for GCC. Most of us
probably just use text editors like emacs or vi for coding. I think the
BibleTime guys may use KDevelop.
On Windows, it's a whole other story. On that platform we use Borland
C++ 5.0 for BibleCS development, though I think ev
It is my understanding that you can write C code in a text file, and
compile it using GCC in almost every distribution of Linux. The hard
part is dependent files -- each distribution seems to have its own set.
On Mon, 2005-01-17 at 19:15, Greg Marine wrote:
> Good day everyone,
>
> I read on the
Good day everyone,
I read on the CrossWire website that Borland C++ was used to develop
parts of Sword. Like BibleCS or something. I'm curious as to which
version of Borland C++ is used and where it could be used to compile on
Linux too. I'm VERY new to C++ and not sure what IDE is best for work
Well, none that I'm aware of. I probably should have said something like
when other Christian software is built using the Mozilla platform.
One of my thoughts was someone could create a Firefox extension which
integrates the Bible into web browsing. Example, say I find a website on
a topic like
Greg Marine wrote:
Thanks Troy!
The wrapper will also give way to integrating Sword with other
Christian software built using Mozilla's platform.
Curiosity: What other Christian software uses the Mozilla platform?
--
by grace alone,
Don A. Elbourne Jr.
http://elbourne.org/
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