They are both gone, and pr_pointer_t is now pr_ptr_t (pointer may be a
little clearer than ptr, but ptr is consistent with things like intptr,
and keeps the type name short).
This is the simplest fix for the curses/input initialization order
issue. The terminal io code should still be moved to its own file,
really, but I think it can wait.
As it is now a completely separate sub-system, there is a bit of trouble
with mouse handling in that curses must be initialized before input for
the mouse to work properly, but the basic scheme seems to be working
nicely. I suspect the solution to the init order issue is to make have
the curses sub-system initialize the terminal input driver, at least for
mouse input (ie, maybe just enable/disable mouse handing).
The queues in the curses resources struct have been cleaned up and the
threading support code (including for the queues (pipes, really)) has
been moved to its own file.
The input test app currently just prints the devices and the events as
they come in, but demonstrates the new input system working in a
separate thread (though it is currently in with the curses thread).
The word boundaries are currently vary simple, just transitions from
alnum_ (as it was in my old editor and in Borland's editors), but the
basic logic is working.
While qfcc will always align double values to 8 bytes (really, two
global words) regardless of the underlying hardware, gcc does not:
doubles are only 4-byte aligned on 32-bit hardware.
This fixes the invalid debug target handle when running on i686.
Things were getting rather cluttered with everything being qwaq-* and
all in one directory. Now most have lost the qwaq- prefix and have been
moved into subdirectories (non-recursive make).