Preston Shea wrote:
I went back to the sweeping assertions and noticed that "Develop Linux and Unix applications on Windows, develop Windows applications on Mac" doesn't say you can develop Mac standalones on Windows - only that one can preview the look and feel. Like "weapons of mass destruction related program activities," one has to look carefully to find out what it means by what it says."
I suspect you've never used OS 9, right? You'll find that no other OS can create Classic apps either. OS 9 had a file structure unique to itself, and other operating systems don't support it. Mac OS X can emulate it, for now, but next year when Apple stops supporting Classic, who knows?
It's one of those things that anyone who has used OS 9 wouldn't think twice about; sort of like how I don't expect my parrot to like my canary, even though they're both birds. Self-evident if you've been there, but I suppose not so clear to the Mac naifs.
Now if you plan to build for Mac OS X, you can do that fine on Windows. Apple ditched the proprietary file structure for that OS.
-- Jacqueline Landman Gay | [EMAIL PROTECTED] HyperActive Software | http://www.hyperactivesw.com _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
