| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Some of them are no longer useful; drop them.
For the rest, have useful usage messages. And also be a little more principled
in where we introduce CFLAGS, and where we expect it to come in from the
commandline.
I'm choosing not to call gen/run/dgen/drun from test_layers because it
makes test_layers harder for newcomers to read. The scripts aren't the
first thing people should see, they're just useful once you're up and running
hacking on SubX.
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The new example ex9 doesn't yet work natively.
In the process I've emulated the kernel's role in providing args, implemented
a couple of instructions acting on 8-bit operands (useful for ASCII string
operations), and begun the start of the standard library (ascii_length
is the same as strlen).
At the level of SubX we're just only going to support ASCII.
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The teensy/ examples have outlived their usefulness, I think.
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Modify helpers to run either external examples in the subx/teensy/
directory, or my own examples in subx/ directory.
Now I have to say `run test5` instead of `run 5`, and so on.
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I'm getting sick of hitting the <Tab> key.
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