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wilco2009 escribió:Alguien tiene una copia del turbopascal para cpm86?
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¿Has empleado esta?
http://www.retroarchive.org/maslin/disk ... index.html
Que retro te has vuelto con el TPascal!!!
Último mensaje de la página anterior:
wilco2009 escribió:Alguien tiene una copia del turbopascal para cpm86?
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wilco2009 escribió:Comprobado y funcionando.
Alguien tiene una copia del turbopascal para cpm86?
Es que la copia que me he bajado, aparentemente funciona bien ya que compila, muestra el directorio etc, pero cuando le doy a editar el archivo me llena de basura la pantalla.
FloppySoftware escribió:wilco2009 escribió:Comprobado y funcionando.
Alguien tiene una copia del turbopascal para cpm86?
Es que la copia que me he bajado, aparentemente funciona bien ya que compila, muestra el directorio etc, pero cuando le doy a editar el archivo me llena de basura la pantalla.
Mira si has de cambiarle la configuración de pantalla al editor.
FloppySoftware escribió:Aquí está la explicación y solución a ambos problemas:
http://comp.os.cpm.narkive.com/ug8kPgjc ... -cvv-setup
Perdón pero ahora mismo voy "in a hurry" y no puedo precisar más.
As an experiment, make a 144FEAT boot diskette, and boot your system from that
diskette. Then, try your auto-submit thing with that diskette and see if it
works.
Your machine might be suffering from "stack overflow". From the README for my
144FEAT program:
*** quote ***
Besides adding 720 KB, 1.44 MB and 1.2 MB diskette support to CP/M-86, the
program 144MB Featue enlarges the local CP/M-86 stacks for the CCP, the BDOS
and for the control-break handler in CP/Ms BIOS to 256 bytes each.
Originally, these stacks are somewhere between 90 and 128 bytes. For some
modern Pentium systems, these stacks are way too small. Enlarging them
solved some problems I had when running CP/M-86 on a Toshiba Pentium 133
system, like:
- screen saver program changing the current user number
- read and write errors on track 768 (!) on 160 KB and 320 KB diskettes
- scrambled error messages when trying to rename a file at the command prompt.
If you boot CP/M-86 from a higher capacity diskette, the stack space for the
cold start routines in CPM.SYS is increased from 128 bytes to 1 KB. This
enabled me to boot CP/M-86 on a 1999 model Dell Pentium XPST 500 MHz system
with Phoenix ROM-BIOS, where the ROM-BIOS is using ca. 180 bytes of stack
space when accessing the harddisk through interrupt 13h. I think this is an
excessive amount - but now its no longer a problem.
dancresp escribió:En CP/M-86 que recuerde, no, pero en las versiones Personal y Concurrent creo que si.
Q19: What terminal emulation programs are available?
A: (Peter A. Schuman, Howard Goldstein)
The leading CP/M public domain or freeware (author kept copyright but distributed it for free) modem programs are:
MDM740 - The last of the "MDMxxx" programs.
IMP245 - This is nice, and works smoothly within what it does.
What it does, it does very well. IF you have slow floppy drives, there is a patch to cut down the receive buffer size.
MEX114 - different from the above two, but minimally functional with just a MDM740 overlay. To use all of its fine features, you need MEX overlay for your machine.
ZMP15 - This program includes ZMODEM file transfers.
KERMIT - This program may have the widest implementation base because it uses only printable characters for its file transfers. This is a plus because the MODEM7 family of protocols send binary characters that sometimes conflict with the underlying system use. It is a minus because many more characters must be sent and thus is slower. KERMIT may be found on watsun.cc.columbia.edu.
QTERM43F - This is somewhat like using QMODEM on an MSDOS machine. Qterm has VT100 emulation mode as well as XMODEM and KERMIT protocol. If you can get (or write) a good overlay, this is a nice program. (Bug fixes to 43E were released in a separate library to bring it up to 43F. The FIX library did not include a new binary; users had to do their own patching.)
For high speed transfers, you will probably need interrupt-driven routines, which are available for some these. The exact baud rate where it becomes necessary varies by system and program.
wilco2009 escribió:Engañosamente puede parecer que el ARC, pero resulta que son formatos diferentes. He leido que el tradicional ARC del MSDOS se llamaba ARK en CP/M, pero no he encontrado ninguna versión disponible para CP/M 86.
minter escribió:wilco2009 escribió:Engañosamente puede parecer que el ARC, pero resulta que son formatos diferentes. He leido que el tradicional ARC del MSDOS se llamaba ARK en CP/M, pero no he encontrado ninguna versión disponible para CP/M 86.
He encontrado el ARC86.
¿Te valdrá esto?
Viene con documentación.
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