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Sending modern languages back to 1980s game programmers
#131805 - 11/21/07 09:42 AM
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R. Belmont |
Cuckoo for IGAvania
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Re: Sending modern languages back to 1980s game programmers
[Re: twisty]
#131839 - 11/21/07 07:52 PM
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I hate to puncture that guy's uphill-both-ways-in-the-snow story, but there were source-level debuggers for at least the NES, SNES, and Genesis (and of course everything after them). Also, he seems to have completely missed out on the fact that a lot of name-brand 80s games were running on script interpreters: the Infocom Z-Machine, Sierra's AGI and SCI, and Lucas's SCUMM.
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tb2000 |
Arcade and retro fan
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Re: Sending modern languages back to 1980s game programmers
[Re: twisty]
#131841 - 11/21/07 08:13 PM
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> http://prog21.dadgum.com/6.html
I remember learning BASIC (well, mostly, enough that I could look at BASIC listings in magazines and more or less understand what was happening) on my old ZX Spectrum + & +3 but Assembler just scared me! I thought about trying to learn it but didn't really put enough effort in in the end. I thought that some of the games on the Spectrum at least were programmed on other machines (like early PCs or Apple machines) and transferred over via an interface? I'm sure I remember reading a feature of some sort in one of the magazines of the era.
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Sune |
Connected
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Re: Sending modern languages back to 1980s game programmers
[Re: tb2000]
#134586 - 12/16/07 03:41 AM
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> > http://prog21.dadgum.com/6.html > > I remember learning BASIC (well, mostly, enough that I could look at BASIC listings > in magazines and more or less understand what was happening) on my old ZX Spectrum + > & +3 but Assembler just scared me! I thought about trying to learn it but didn't > really put enough effort in in the end.
Ha! that's my story exactly, except i had the rubber keyboard model. I was typing in listings from magazines on the Speccy when I was 9 years old. Impressed the hell out of my dad's students in evening school :-) They had a bunch of Spectrums with the Interface 2, networked together and my dad taught BASIC programming there. > I thought that some of the games on the Spectrum at least were programmed on other > machines (like early PCs or Apple machines) and transferred over via an interface? > I'm sure I remember reading a feature of some sort in one of the magazines of the > era.
I remember reading a bio on the Darling brothers of Codemasters and I think they said they were doing development on a modified Amstrad CPC, using their own software. I can't find it now, shame because it was a really good read..
S
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Orc |
A Motivated, Liquidated Nightmare..... Like A Baby With A Laser On A Rocking Chair
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Re: Sending modern languages back to 1980s game programmers
[Re: Sune]
#135931 - 12/29/07 11:30 PM
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> Ha! that's my story exactly, except i had the rubber keyboard model.
Heh.....
Me to....
A mag proggy never worked first time.....
That was the fun....
Finding the mistake/s.....
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This is what happens when cabby no fitty through door...
http://orc.mameworld.info
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