Level 1 of the cross-language linking roadmap entry: produce an object file with a renamed entry point so a BASIC program can be linked into a larger C or Fortran build. - src/compiler_main.c: --emit-obj runs gcc -c (compile-only, produces prog.o) and skips the runtime link. --main-name NAME (or --main-name=NAME) is plumbed through codegen_opts_t. - src/codegen.c: emit `int <name>(int argc, char **argv)` instead of always emitting `main`. Default unchanged when --main-name isn't specified. - include/codegen.h: add main_name to codegen_opts_t. - docs/getting-started.md: new "Cross-Language Linking" section with C and Fortran (iso_c_binding) driver examples. - docs/roadmap.md: three levels of cross-language linking, with Level 1 marked done, Level 2 (BASIC-side EXTERN declarations) as the next concrete step, Level 3 (BASIC SUBs as C functions) deferred. Also added: FORTRAN-style WRITE / C-style PRINTF formatted I/O extensions, and a NumPy / DataFrame / Matplotlib- style standard library section as a separate sub-project track. Verified end-to-end: a BASIC program compiled with --emit-obj --main-name=run_basic_greet links cleanly with both a C driver (gcc) and a Fortran driver (gfortran with iso_c_binding), and prints the BASIC output before returning to the host. All 72 interpreter / 68 compat / 63 compiler tests still pass.
303 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
303 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
# Getting Started
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## Dependencies
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- C11 compiler (GCC or Clang)
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- CMake 3.10+
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- PulseAudio development library (`libpulse-simple`) -- optional, for `SOUND`/`BEEP`/`PLAY`
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On Debian/Ubuntu:
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```bash
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sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake libpulse-dev
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```
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On Fedora/RHEL:
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```bash
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sudo dnf install gcc cmake pulseaudio-libs-devel
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```
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## Building
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```bash
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git clone https://github.com/evvaletov/gw-basic-2026.git
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cd gw-basic-2026
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mkdir -p build && cd build
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cmake .. && make
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```
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The binary is `build/gwbasic`.
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## Usage
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### Interactive Mode
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Running `./gwbasic` with no arguments launches the full-screen editor:
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```
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$ ./gwbasic
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GW-BASIC 2026 0.17.0
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(C) Eremey Valetov 2026. MIT License.
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Based on Microsoft GW-BASIC assembly source.
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Ok
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PRINT 2+2
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4
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Ok
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FOR I=1 TO 5:PRINT I;:NEXT
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1 2 3 4 5
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Ok
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```
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Use arrow keys to move the cursor freely. Press Enter on any screen line to
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re-enter it. F1-F10 insert common commands (F2 runs the program).
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### Running a Program File
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```bash
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./gwbasic tests/programs/prime_sieve.bas
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```
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### Piped Input
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```bash
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echo '10 FOR I=1 TO 10:PRINT I*I;:NEXT' | ./gwbasic
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```
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### Direct Mode Expressions
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Type expressions and statements at the `Ok` prompt:
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```
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PRINT SIN(3.14159/2)
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1
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A$="HELLO WORLD":MID$(A$,7,5)="BASIC":PRINT A$
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HELLO BASIC
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```
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### Command-Line Options
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```
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Usage: gwbasic [options] [file.bas]
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Options:
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-f, --full Use full terminal size (default: 25x80)
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-h, --help Show this help
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--lpt DEVICE|FILE Printer output destination (default: LPT1.TXT)
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Use LPT1 or /dev/lp0 for real hardware
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-v, --version Show version
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```
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## Ahead-of-Time Compiler
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`gwbasic-compile` translates `.bas` programs to C source, then optionally
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invokes GCC to produce native executables linked against `libgwrt.a`.
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### Basic Usage
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```bash
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# Emit C source to stdout
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build/gwbasic-compile program.bas
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# Compile to native executable
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build/gwbasic-compile -c --runtime . program.bas
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```
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Both numbered (`10 PRINT "HI"`) and unnumbered (`PRINT "HI"`) sources
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compile. Unnumbered lines get auto-assigned numbers (10, 20, 30, ...) so
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the analysis pass and codegen can produce labeled statements; explicit
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line numbers are preserved. Direct-mode scratchpad scripts and classic
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"just a list of statements" programs compile without manual renumbering.
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### Compiler Options
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```
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Usage: gwbasic-compile [options] input.bas
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Options:
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-o FILE Output C source file (default: stdout)
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-c Compile to executable (invoke gcc)
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-O LEVEL GCC optimization level (default: 2)
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--keep-c Keep generated C file (with -c)
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--runtime DIR Path to runtime headers/library
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--warn Static analysis warnings
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--safe Runtime safety checks (implies --warn)
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--safe=sanitize Above + address/UB sanitizers (with -c)
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--no-gc-check Skip per-line gwrt_check_line() (no GC, no Break)
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--fast-math Skip division-by-zero checks
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```
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### Performance Flags (`--no-gc-check` / `--fast-math`)
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`--no-gc-check` skips the `gwrt_check_line()` call emitted at the start of
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every non-REM line. That call drives the string-pool compacting GC and
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the Ctrl+Break trap. Removing it gives a small per-line speedup for
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programs that don't allocate strings or need responsive interruption.
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String reassignment can still trigger compaction lazily, but the
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guaranteed periodic check is gone.
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`--fast-math` removes the explicit divide-by-zero check around the `/`
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operator. The result of `X = 10 / 0` becomes `inf` rather than raising
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"Division by zero". Useful for compute-bound code that already validates
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inputs.
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### Memory Safety (`--warn` / `--safe`)
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The `--warn` flag enables compile-time static analysis warnings:
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- **Uninitialized variables** -- variables used before their first assignment
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(via LET, FOR, READ, INPUT)
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- **GOTO/GOSUB to nonexistent line** -- jump targets that don't exist in the
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program
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- **Unreachable code** -- lines after unconditional GOTO/END/STOP that are not
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jump targets
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The `--safe` flag (implies `--warn`) adds runtime safety checks to the
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generated C:
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- **Integer overflow detection** -- arithmetic on integer (%) variables uses
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checked functions (`gw_int_add`, `gw_int_sub`, `gw_int_mul`) that raise
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"Overflow" instead of silently wrapping, matching real GW-BASIC behavior
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- **Enhanced array diagnostics** -- subscript errors report the array name,
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subscript value, line number, and which dimension exceeded its bound
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- **GOSUB stack diagnostics** -- stack overflow reports the source line and
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current depth
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The `--safe=sanitize` flag (with `-c`) additionally passes
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`-fsanitize=address,undefined` to GCC for full memory error detection.
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```bash
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# Warnings only (zero runtime cost)
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build/gwbasic-compile --warn program.bas
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# Runtime safety checks
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build/gwbasic-compile --safe -c --runtime . program.bas
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# Full sanitizer build (debugging)
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build/gwbasic-compile --safe=sanitize -c --runtime . program.bas
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```
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### Cross-Language Linking (`--emit-obj` / `--main-name`)
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`--emit-obj` produces a `.o` object file instead of a final executable;
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`--main-name NAME` renames the entry point so it doesn't collide with
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the host project's `main()`. Together they let you link BASIC into a
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larger C or Fortran build.
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```bash
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# BASIC source compiled to greet.o with renamed entry point
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build/gwbasic-compile --emit-obj --main-name=run_basic_greet \
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--runtime . greet.bas
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```
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C driver:
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```c
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extern int run_basic_greet(int argc, char **argv);
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int main(void) {
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run_basic_greet(0, NULL); /* runs the BASIC program */
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return 0;
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}
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```
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Link both together:
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```bash
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gcc driver.c greet.o -L./build -lgwrt -lm -lpthread -lpulse-simple
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```
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Fortran driver (modern, with `iso_c_binding`):
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```fortran
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program main
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use iso_c_binding
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interface
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function run_basic_greet(argc, argv) bind(c, name="run_basic_greet")
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use iso_c_binding
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integer(c_int), value :: argc
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type(c_ptr), value :: argv
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integer(c_int) :: run_basic_greet
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end function
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end interface
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integer(c_int) :: rc
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rc = run_basic_greet(0, c_null_ptr)
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end program
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```
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```bash
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gfortran driver.f90 greet.o -L./build -lgwrt -lm -lpthread -lpulse-simple
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```
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The BASIC code shares the `gw` interpreter state with `libgwrt`, so a
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single binary runs at most one BASIC program at a time. Calling BASIC
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from C / Fortran is always safe; calling C / Fortran from BASIC needs
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the foreign-function-declaration extension on the roadmap (Level 2).
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## Building for DOS / FreeDOS
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GW-BASIC 2026 cross-compiles to DOS using OpenWatcom V2 (`wcc` / `wcc386`).
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Two targets are available:
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### 16-bit real-mode (recommended for FreeDOS)
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Produces a standalone 128KB MZ executable -- no DOS extender required.
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```bash
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wmake -f Makefile.dos16
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```
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Requires OpenWatcom V2 with 16-bit DOS target. Uses MEDIUM memory model
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(`-mm`): code can exceed 64KB, data must fit in 64KB.
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### 32-bit DOS/4GW
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Produces a 175KB LE executable requiring `DOS4GW.EXE` (265KB) at runtime.
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Also builds the compiler (`GWBASCOM.EXE`) and runtime library (`GWRT.LIB`).
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```bash
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wmake -f Makefile.dos
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```
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### Running on FreeDOS
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Copy `GWBASIC.EXE` (and `DOS4GW.EXE` for the 32-bit build) to your FreeDOS
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system. Run programs from the command line:
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```
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C:\> GWBASIC PROGRAM.BAS
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```
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Running without arguments launches the interactive editor. The TUI renders
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through BIOS INT 10h with the screen buffer in far memory, so the full-screen
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editor, F-key bar, cursor positioning, and scrolling all work on bare FreeDOS
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without `ANSI.SYS`.
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### Verifying the DOS Build
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Two automated checks run from a Linux host:
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```bash
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./build_dos.sh 16 # produces gwbasic16.exe (~128KB)
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./build_dos.sh 32 # produces gwbasic.exe (~175KB)
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bash tests/run_dos_smoke.sh # runs gwbasic16.exe under DOSBox-X, diffs golden
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```
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The smoke harness validates non-interactive features (arithmetic, strings,
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control flow, GOSUB, FOR/NEXT, DATA/READ, DEF FN, file I/O via OPEN/PRINT#).
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The interactive TUI features below need a manual session under DOSBox-X or
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real FreeDOS:
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| Check | What to do | Expected |
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|-------|-----------|----------|
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| TUI startup | Launch `GWBASIC.EXE` with no arguments | `Ok` prompt, F-key bar at row 25 (`1LIST 2RUN ...` in inverse video) |
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| Cursor keys | Press up/down/left/right | Cursor moves freely without printing characters |
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| Re-enter line | Type `10 PRINT "HI"`, Enter; arrow up to that line, Enter | Line re-tokenized; subsequent `LIST` shows it stored |
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| F1 (LIST) | Press F1 then Enter | Inserts `LIST `, runs `LIST` |
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| F2 (RUN) | Type a program, press F2 | Runs it (`RUN\r` is appended) |
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| Insert toggle | Press Ins; type characters mid-line | Cursor switches between block (insert) and underline (overwrite) shapes; characters insert vs overstrike accordingly |
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| Home / End | Press Home, End | Cursor jumps to column 0 / past last printable char on the row |
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| Scroll | Fill the screen with output | Bottom row pinned to the F-key bar; new lines push old ones up |
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| Ctrl-C | Run `10 GOTO 10` and press Ctrl-C | Program stops with `Break in 10` |
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| KEY OFF / KEY ON | `KEY OFF` then `KEY ON` | F-key bar disappears / reappears |
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| CLS | `CLS` | Screen clears, cursor at top-left |
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| Exit | `SYSTEM` | Returns to DOS prompt cleanly (no leftover escape codes) |
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