Understand your Mac and iPhone more deeply by tracing the evolution of Mac OS X from prelease to Swift. John Siracusa delivers the details.
You've got two main options:
Minimalist installation of OpenBSD on the Apple M2 using QEMU
#!/bin/bash | |
gdb -p "$1" -batch -ex 'set {short}$rip = 0x050f' -ex 'set $rax=231' -ex 'set $rdi=0' -ex 'cont' |
WARNING: Article moved to separate repo to allow users contributions: https://github.com/raysan5/custom_game_engines
A couple of weeks ago I played (and finished) A Plague Tale, a game by Asobo Studio. I was really captivated by the game, not only by the beautiful graphics but also by the story and the locations in the game. I decided to investigate a bit about the game tech and I was surprised to see it was developed with a custom engine by a relatively small studio. I know there are some companies using custom engines but it's very difficult to find a detailed market study with that kind of information curated and updated. So this article.
Nowadays lots of companies choose engines like [Unreal](https:
I have a pet project I work on, every now and then. CNoEvil.
The concept is simple enough.
What if, for a moment, we forgot all the rules we know. That we ignore every good idea, and accept all the terrible ones. That nothing is off limits. Can we turn C into a new language? Can we do what Lisp and Forth let the over-eager programmer do, but in C?
#pragma once | |
#define DYN_ARR_OF(type) struct { \ | |
type *data; \ | |
type *endptr; \ | |
uint32_t capacity; \ | |
} | |
#if !defined(__cplusplus) | |
#define decltype(x) void* |
// | |
// Author: Jonathan Blow | |
// Version: 1 | |
// Date: 31 August, 2018 | |
// | |
// This code is released under the MIT license, which you can find at | |
// | |
// https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT | |
// | |
// |
// Package main is a sample macOS-app-bundling program to demonstrate how to | |
// automate the process described in this tutorial: | |
// | |
// https://medium.com/@mattholt/packaging-a-go-application-for-macos-f7084b00f6b5 | |
// | |
// Bundling the .app is the first thing it does, and creating the DMG is the | |
// second. Making the DMG is optional, and is only done if you provide | |
// the template DMG file, which you have to create beforehand. | |
// | |
// Example use: |
I've never had great understanding of launchctl but the deprecation of the old commands with launchctl 2 (10.10) has been terrible as all resources only cover the old commands, and documentation for Apple utilities is generally disgracefully bad, with launchctl not dissembling.
Mad props to https://babodee.wordpress.com/2016/04/09/launchctl-2-0-syntax/ which contains most details
Internally, launchd has several domains, but launchctl 1 would only ask for service names,