Hamurabi Pseudo Coding

I didn’t work on Hamurabi today, so I won’t be writing about that.  In fact, I won’t be writing any actual code for it until the books on Pascal come in.

I will be starting on some pseudo code.  When I work on programs, I found that if I write it down in English, in an outline form, I can then break each piece down into logical steps.  I then just keep breaking each step down until they are manageable.

I’ve been thinking about doing Hamurabi in ZBasic at the same time, using the same pseudo coding.

I may also do a straight conversion to Applesoft.

I spent the day working on other projects.  Right now, my Apple //c is tucked away into a corner off the end of my desk (See the picture above).  It’s not really a good place to work on it, but has worked out well for small Apple II projects in the past.  I’m coming to the conclusion, that I need to move it in order to make it more useful.

Non-Apple II stuff follows.

So yesterday, I wrote about Windows doing an update.  This was not entirely acurate as it was only my laptop, running Windows 7 32bit.  This morning my desktop, Win 7 64 bit, my old desktop Win XP and my other laptop running Ubuntu, all went through an update that required a restart.  The Win 7 desktop had to be restarted again in order to get back on the internet.

The older desktop I caught just before the update restarted.  This desktop runs SimH, simulating a DEC PDP 11/70 with RSTS/E V7.  When the computer shuts down, without shutting down SimH properly, it takes a while to restart SimH.

Posted in Apple //c, Emulation, Programming, Projects Tagged with: , , , , ,
2 comments on “Hamurabi Pseudo Coding
  1. D Finnigan says:

    Ah yes, flow-charting and pseudo-code! Two time-tested traditions! I still write my design notes on paper, using diagrams as appropriate. I always make sure to date my notes so I can maintain a good chronology.

  2. Daily Apple says:

    Flow charting… Arg… I do only a most informal flow chart when I’m desperate.
    We used to have to do those for every program we wrote in our programming classes.

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