I did that on Virtual T and V returned 0. On Wed, 6 May 2026 at 16:00, Kenneth Pettit <[email protected]> wrote:
> I assumed that might be your choice. :) > > Ken > > On 5/6/26 12:07 PM, John R. Hogerhuis wrote: > > Hmm maybe I'll take C for cloudt > > On Wed, May 6, 2026, 11:57 AM Kenneth Pettit <[email protected]> wrote: > >> VirtualT has a special port implemented you can read to know you are >> running on VirtualT. If you execute: >> >> Assembly: >> IN 20H >> >> Basic: >> V=INP(32) >> >> It will return ASCII 'V" on VirtualT and not 'V" (maybe zero or 0xFF) on >> anything else. >> >> Ken >> >> On 5/6/26 7:32 AM, John R. Hogerhuis wrote: >> >> Well iirc cloudt emulates a t102. >> >> There probably is some way to detect that you're running a specific >> emulator but it's nothing durable. >> >> We could dedicate an I/o address or something.like that. >> >> -- John. >> >> >> >> On Wed, May 6, 2026, 7:18 AM Douglas Quagliana <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >>> All, >>> >>> How can I programatically determine which hardware machine model or >>> which emulator the code is running on? Ideally this should be able to >>> identify Model 100, Model 102, Model 200, VirtualT, or VirtualVanessa. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Douglas >>> >>> >> >
