Mercurial > pidgin
view PROGRAMMING_NOTES @ 9259:f5f7482678d2
[gaim-migrate @ 10058]
Patch by Felipe Contreras. He says, "This patch creates a different
callback for the end of a slpcall, so there is no mistake with the current
callback for a sucessful slpcall ... when we reach the end of a slpcall the
slpcall data has been destroyed, the got_userdisplay cb should be called
only as the sucessfull slpcall callback."
Essentially, it fixes the corrupt buddy icon checksum issue, though it
needs another patch that has to be reworked first, if I understood right.
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author | Christian Hammond <chipx86@chipx86.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 10 Jun 2004 20:57:52 +0000 |
parents | 10b5ac17fdd6 |
children | da88e2cd5c53 |
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Notes on keeping GAIM OS independant ------------------------------------ General ------- - Use G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S and G_DIR_SEPARATOR for paths - Use g_getenv, g_snprintf, g_vsnprintf - Use gaim_home_dir instead of g_get_home_dir or g_getenv("HOME") - Make sure when including win32dep.h that it is the last header to be included. - Open binary files when reading or writing with 'b' mode. e.g: fopen("somefile", "wb"); Not doing so will open files in windows using defaut translation mode. i.e. newline -> <CR><LF> Paths ----- - DATADIR, LOCALEDIR & LIBDIR are defined in wingaim as functions. Doing the following will therefore break the windows build: printf("File in DATADIR is: %s\n", DATADIR G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "pic.png"); it should be: printf("File in DATADIR is: %s%s%s\n", DATADIR, G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, "pic.png"); - When writing out paths to .gaimrc, use wgaim_escape_dirsep. This is necessary because the Windows dir separator '\' is being used to escape characters, when paths are read in from the .gaimrc file. PLUGINS & PROTOS ---------------- - G_MODULE_EXPORT all functions which are to be accessed from outside the scope of its "dll" or "so". (E.G. gaim_plugin_init) - G_MODULE_IMPORT all global variables which are located outside your dynamic library. (E.G. connections) (Not doing this will cause "Memory Access Violations" in Win32)