[Coco] Nicks Survey results
Robert Gault
robert.gault at worldnet.att.net
Fri Dec 5 17:52:01 EST 2003
ostro011 wrote:
> On 5 Dec 2003, Gene Heskett wrote:
>
>
>>all sorts of neat things like Jake Commanders Chrmakey editor. I was
>>also using os9 exclusively by then.
>>
>
>
> Gene (and others), please take this question in the spirit it is being
> asked. This is something I've often wondered about.
>
> My involvement with the Coco for the past 24 years has been in programming
> it in BASIC and ML. I purchased OS9 soon after it was available but could
> never get my arms around it, and there just was no driving force in my
> small world that would make learning and using OS9 beneficial to me. The
> Tandy package was not very user friendly, at least in my eyes.
>
> I think the majority of you on this list uses OS9 either most of the time
> or all the time, as Gene stated above. I respect that and am a little bit
> in awe of that. I consider Mark and Boisy as good friends, and they are
> into OS9 in a huge way. We all owe both of them a big debt of gratitude,
> as we owe many of the rest of you as well.
>
> OK, enough pre-amble.
>
> The combination of the 6809 and OS9, with all its multitasking abilities
> and the like, really showed off how the Coco was much more than the game
> machine Tandy sold it as. I would love to tackle OS9 again, but I need to
> know what the rest of you find in OS9 that makes it so useful to you. Is
> it mostly academic and a fun hobby, or will I be able to find it useful or
> at least a lot of fun and worth the time. Keep in mind that my love is
> programming this 6809 machine, as time permits, especially in ML, otherwise
> my Coco's are just a fun toy for the kids to play when they are feeling
> retro or want a lesson in programming. I'm not asking if OS9 will solve
> any of my computer problems. I'm chained to a PC all day at work in my
> research lab. But where will I find OS9 the most interesting to use? What
> do you, the OS9 experts on this list, use OS9 for the most?
>
> I really appreciate your help in this, and I hope you don't take any of my
> comments the wrong way.
>
> Thanks!
>
> -- Steve --
>
>
>
If you don't need to do disk I/O, you may prefer ml programming under
Disk Basic where you can do whatever you want with the system. However,
if I/O is important, OS-9/NitrOS-9 greatly simplifies the task of file
manipulation through a well defined set of system calls.
Attempting to interface with most of the Basic ROM routines is difficult
to nightmare. Attempting the same things in OS-9 is simple.
I have found only one area where ml programming from Basic is easier
than from OS-9, graphics. If that is what your into, then don't bother
with OS-9.
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