Overview
Comment: | README.md: Fix typo |
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Downloads: | Tarball | ZIP archive | SQL archive |
Timelines: | family | ancestors | descendants | both | trunk |
Files: | files | file ages | folders |
SHA3-256: |
6d4eb68bdfadc694c9f0d0a017f39dd7 |
User & Date: | js on 2024-08-17 10:10:56 |
Other Links: | manifest | tags |
Context
2024-08-17
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10:46 | README.md: Move most of the content to the wiki check-in: ba6455ba6f user: js tags: trunk | |
10:11 | README.md: Fix typo check-in: 0ac7e646b4 user: js tags: 1.1 | |
10:10 | README.md: Fix typo check-in: 6d4eb68bdf user: js tags: trunk | |
09:51 | Move private functions into private headers check-in: b829f3e798 user: js tags: trunk | |
Changes
Modified README.md from [5c05fa6b7d] to [beb01a6b4e].
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50 51 52 53 54 55 56 | compatible with GCC ≥ 4.6 to allow maximum portability. ObjFW is intentionally incompatible with Foundation. This has two reasons: * GNUstep already provides a reimplementation of Foundation, which is only compatible to a certain degree. This means that a developer still needs to care about differences between frameworks if they want to be portable. The | | | | 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 | compatible with GCC ≥ 4.6 to allow maximum portability. ObjFW is intentionally incompatible with Foundation. This has two reasons: * GNUstep already provides a reimplementation of Foundation, which is only compatible to a certain degree. This means that a developer still needs to care about differences between frameworks if they want to be portable. The idea behind ObjFW is that developers do not need to concern themselves with portability and making sure their code works with multiple frameworks: Instead, if it works with ObjFW on one platform, they can reasonably expect it to also work with ObjFW on another platform. ObjFW behaving differently on different operating systems (unless inevitable because it is a platform-specific part, like the Windows Registry) is considered a bug and will be fixed. * Foundation predates a lot of modern Objective-C concepts. The most prominent one is exceptions, which are only used in Foundation as a replacement for `abort()`. This results in cumbersome error handling, |
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