For your information, FOR command (along with LFNFOR command as in MS-DOS 7 /Windows 9x) had already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X) for some time, including wildcards and optional LFN (long filename) support as in Windows 98. Interesting to see another implementation of this command (although without wildcards or LFN support).
For your information, FOR command (along with LFNFOR command) had already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X) for some time, including wildcards and optional LFN (long filename) support as in Windows 98. Interesting to see another implementation of this command (although without wildcards or LFN support).
For your information, FOR command (along with LFNFOR command) had already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X) for some time, including wildcards and optional LFN (long filename) support as in Windows 98. Interesting to see another implementation of this command (although without wildcards or LFN support).
FYI - FOR command (along with LFNFOR command) had already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X) for some time, including wildcards and optional LFN (long filename) support as in Windows 98. Interesting to see another implemtation of this command (although without wildcards or LFN support).
FYI - FOR command (along with LFNFOR command) has already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X) for some time, including wildcards and optional LFN (long filename) support as in Windows 98.
FYI, FOR command (along with LFNFOR command) has already been implemented in some DOSBox forks (such as DOSBox LFN and DOSBox-X), with wildcards and (optional) LFN support as in Windows 98.
See: https://sourceforge.net/p/pcbasic/discussion/general/thread/1d61e06814/
Great news! The full source code of GW-BASIC (as of 1983) has been officially released by Microsoft to the public. The assembly-language source code is now available in GitHub under the MIT license. https://github.com/microsoft/GW-BASIC I think PC-BASIC can probably benefit from this too.