From: ol.sc
Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 21:00:42 +0000 (+0000)
Subject: Fixed line endings I broke with recent change.
X-Git-Tag: V2.13.3~802
X-Git-Url: https://git.sur5r.net/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=8663ae59759ae95911bebc0b182911071215a52b;p=cc65
Fixed line endings I broke with recent change.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@4618 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
---
diff --git a/libsrc/c64/c64-1351.s b/libsrc/c64/c64-1351.s
index d4dfa1c91..8dd5c012c 100644
--- a/libsrc/c64/c64-1351.s
+++ b/libsrc/c64/c64-1351.s
@@ -5,22 +5,22 @@
; 2009-09-26, Ullrich von Bassewitz
; 2010-02-06, Greg King
;
-; The driver prevents the keyboard from interfering by changing the
-; keyboard's output port into an input port while the driver reads its
-; controller device. That disables a wire that is left active by the
-; Kernal. That wire is used by the STOP-key to break out of BASIC
-; programs -- CC65 programs don't use that feature. The wire is shared
-; by these keys: STOP, "Q", Commodore, Space, "2", CTRL, Left-Arrow, and
-; "1". I listed them, in order, from bit 7 over to bit 0. The
-; rightmost five keys can look like joystick switches.
-;
-; The driver prevents the mouse/joystick from interfering by "blinding"
-; the keyboard scanner while any button/switch is active. It changes
-; the input port into an output port, then stores all zero-bits in that
-; port's latch. Reading from an output port sees the bitwise-AND of the
-; latch and the input signals. Therefore, the scanner thinks that eight
-; keys are being pushed at the same time. It doesn't know what to do
-; about that condition; so, it does nothing. The driver lets the
+; The driver prevents the keyboard from interfering by changing the
+; keyboard's output port into an input port while the driver reads its
+; controller device. That disables a wire that is left active by the
+; Kernal. That wire is used by the STOP-key to break out of BASIC
+; programs -- CC65 programs don't use that feature. The wire is shared
+; by these keys: STOP, "Q", Commodore, Space, "2", CTRL, Left-Arrow, and
+; "1". I listed them, in order, from bit 7 over to bit 0. The
+; rightmost five keys can look like joystick switches.
+;
+; The driver prevents the mouse/joystick from interfering by "blinding"
+; the keyboard scanner while any button/switch is active. It changes
+; the input port into an output port, then stores all zero-bits in that
+; port's latch. Reading from an output port sees the bitwise-AND of the
+; latch and the input signals. Therefore, the scanner thinks that eight
+; keys are being pushed at the same time. It doesn't know what to do
+; about that condition; so, it does nothing. The driver lets the
; scanner see normally, again, when no buttons/switches are active.
;
diff --git a/libsrc/c64/c64-joymouse.s b/libsrc/c64/c64-joymouse.s
index 23564c39a..bd3236129 100644
--- a/libsrc/c64/c64-joymouse.s
+++ b/libsrc/c64/c64-joymouse.s
@@ -4,22 +4,22 @@
; Ullrich von Bassewitz, 2004-03-29, 2009-09-26
; 2010-02-08, Greg King
;
-; The driver prevents the keyboard from interfering by changing the
-; keyboard's output port into an input port while the driver reads its
-; controller device. That disables a wire that is left active by the
-; Kernal. That wire is used by the STOP-key to break out of BASIC
-; programs -- CC65 programs don't use that feature. The wire is shared
-; by these keys: STOP, "Q", Commodore, Space, "2", CTRL, Left-Arrow, and
-; "1". I listed them, in order, from bit 7 over to bit 0. The
-; rightmost five keys can look like joystick switches.
-;
-; The driver prevents the mouse/joystick from interfering by "blinding"
-; the keyboard scanner while any button/switch is active. It changes
-; the input port into an output port, then stores all zero-bits in that
-; port's latch. Reading from an output port sees the bitwise-AND of the
-; latch and the input signals. Therefore, the scanner thinks that eight
-; keys are being pushed at the same time. It doesn't know what to do
-; about that condition; so, it does nothing. The driver lets the
+; The driver prevents the keyboard from interfering by changing the
+; keyboard's output port into an input port while the driver reads its
+; controller device. That disables a wire that is left active by the
+; Kernal. That wire is used by the STOP-key to break out of BASIC
+; programs -- CC65 programs don't use that feature. The wire is shared
+; by these keys: STOP, "Q", Commodore, Space, "2", CTRL, Left-Arrow, and
+; "1". I listed them, in order, from bit 7 over to bit 0. The
+; rightmost five keys can look like joystick switches.
+;
+; The driver prevents the mouse/joystick from interfering by "blinding"
+; the keyboard scanner while any button/switch is active. It changes
+; the input port into an output port, then stores all zero-bits in that
+; port's latch. Reading from an output port sees the bitwise-AND of the
+; latch and the input signals. Therefore, the scanner thinks that eight
+; keys are being pushed at the same time. It doesn't know what to do
+; about that condition; so, it does nothing. The driver lets the
; scanner see normally, again, when no buttons/switches are active.
;