21-11-2007 12:56 PM | ||
_r.u.s.s. | maybe you should add it to the dosbox tutorial, you know, if some people were confusing like this one | |
21-11-2007 10:15 AM | ||
Rogue |
I'll have to dig my CD with Magic Carpet. (It's been many years since I played it) Only reason it might crash is different setting in DOSBox and D-Fend. (D-Fend just calls the game to run into DOSBox) Yes, some of us preffer typing instead of using file manager when operating DOS. |
|
21-11-2007 10:04 AM | ||
The Fifth Horseman |
One name I remember right now is Magic Carpet which kept crashing in D-Fend at a certain point in the game. When I instructed the user to run it in DOSBox without using D-Fend, crashes ended. That's not the only such case, but I don't really feel like digging up each and every one of them. Quote:
|
|
21-11-2007 09:54 AM | ||
Rogue |
Can you point me in the direction of those problems with D-Fend that can't be resolved. If something works in DOSBox, ti will work as well if you use D-Fend. (as long as you installed it and use it properly) Norton Commander is part of nostalgia if used with DOSBox. |
|
21-11-2007 09:30 AM | ||
The Fifth Horseman |
The very point of my guide is not using D-Fend, as it causes compatibility problems with some games. Also, a lot of "n00b-questions" we get on the forums tend to come from users who only used D-Fend to run games in DOSBox until they ended up with some simple problem that D-Fend could not get them past. Finally, Norton is by no means the definite way to run things. It's possible to create customized shortcuts and config files that allow you to run games in DOSBox simply by running the shortcut (easier than it sounds, too). Doing it for 90-something games can take some time and patience, though, and not everyone has sufficient amount of both (hell, I'm only doing it for the games I run most frequently). Using NC is a bit easier (though when I finish the guide, the shortcut thing will be there as the final chapter). |
|
21-11-2007 09:05 AM | ||
Rogue | But still it is not easier then DOSBox front end such as D-Fend. | |
21-11-2007 05:50 AM | ||
Mighty Midget |
to manually start a game in DOS, you need a couple of DOS commands that you type in the DOS prompt: cd (change directory, equals clicking a folder in windows) followed by the directory's (folder's) name. [filename of either the game's exe-, bat- or com file] Example: You have Colonization (start file = colonize.exe) in a directory called Colonize, which in turn is in a directory called MPS. In the the prompt showing C:\> type cd mps cd colonize colonize The last command (colonize) will start the exe, bat or com file named "colonize". If you enter the wrong directory, type cd .. to go one step back in the directory tree. Another helpful command is dir which will display all files and directories in the current directory. dir can be used with the /p switch to list the files and directories one screen at a time if the list is long: dir /p One last thing. When looking for a particular file extention, you can type dir .[file extention] e.g. dir .exe |
|
21-11-2007 03:29 AM | ||
crowing7 | i think the link you tried sending me to for norton commander is no good due to the recent site moving. though i can't get norton commander working i was wondering if i need it, or if you could just tell me how to manually start a game. | |
20-11-2007 05:52 PM | ||
The Fifth Horseman | Easier navigation in them when you can't use Windows file manager (which sucks anyway). | |
20-11-2007 03:01 PM | ||
Rogue |
Thanks for reply. I never used norton commander, as I never had any problems with DOS file management. Why do you need norton if you can have direct access to files trough windows?? |
|
This thread has more than 10 replies. Click here to review the whole thread. |