Welcome to AmigaOS | AmigaOS AmigaOS 4’s extensive 680x0 emulation capabilities are helping to fulfill the need for running Classic Amiga software Run your beloved 68K Amiga programs on your modern and fast hardware fully integrated with the rest of the AmigaOS
AmigaOS Documentation Wiki Documentation is organized into multiple sections The Developer Section contains documentation that is useful for developing applications, device drivers, games and other programming projects on AmigaOS
UserDoc:How AmigaOS Works - AmigaOS Documentation Wiki AmigaOS can run two different kinds of executable files: the AmigaOS native programs made for the PowerPC processor and programs created for the Motorola 68k processors The latter are executed inside an emulation that translates them into PowerPC code
AmigaDOS Introduction - AmigaOS Documentation Wiki AmigaDOS is the name given to a subsystem group of modules which give to the AmigaOS capability to handle I O with data storage units like hard disks, SSD etc AmigaDOS extends AmigaOS capabilities with:
UserDoc:Main - AmigaOS Documentation Wiki AmigaOS is a collection of components that oversee the computer hardware data and provide the user with easy, understandable tools to manage and use them In the following Introduction to AmigaOS pages we will discuss the basic concepts:
Path Name Handling - AmigaOS Documentation Wiki In case mypath (from the prototype above) consists only of a file or directory name (like startup-sequence, s, or libs), FilePart() returns a pointer to the start of the string (a k a the same value as mypath)
Narrator Device - AmigaOS Documentation Wiki This article discusses only the narrator device; refer to Translator Library for more information on the translator library While the narrator device on the Amiga supports all of the major device commands (see the Narrator Device Commands and Functions section), two of these commands do most of the work in the device They are: