Native Version Of Sm64 Online Released For Mac



Play Super Mario 64 emulator game online in the highest quality available. Super Mario 64 is a Nintendo 64 game that you can enjoy on Play Emulator. This N64 game is the US English version that works in all modern web browsers without downloading. Super Mario 64 is part of the Mario Games, Arcade Games, and Platform Games you can play here. May 11, 2018 Last September, modders Kaze Emanuar, Melonspeedruns, and Marshivolt discovered a way to allow up to 24 players play Super Mario 64 online together. The fan project, called SM64 Online, attracted. May 04, 2020 Now here is something that came out of nowhere. A team of indie developers has released a native version of Super Mario 64 on the PC. This PC version uses the DirectX 12 API and you can download.

Technical Q&A QA1827

Q: How do I auto-increment my build and version numbers using agvtool?

Native Version Of Sm64 Online Released For Mac Os

A: The version and build number keys respectively specify the marketing and internal versions of your application. agvtool is a command-line tool that allows you to automatically increment these numbers to the next highest number or to a specific number. This document provides step-by-step instructions for updating your build and version numbers using agvtool. The 'Xcode' and 'Command Line' sections indicate the steps to be respectively performed in Xcode and the command line.

Note: The version number, which is the number shown to your application’s users, identifies a released version of your application. It is stored in your application’s Info.plist as CFBundleShortVersionString (Bundle versions string, short) .

The build number identifies an unreleased or released version of your application. It is stored in your application’s Info.plist as CFBundleVersion (Bundle version). See the Information Property List Key Reference for more information about these keys.

See Figure 1 for an example showing the version number and the build number of the App Store app, which are respectively 1.3 and 201.4.

Important: When your app includes multiple targets, agvtool will set the version numbers of all your targets to the same number.

Xcode

You must complete the following steps in your Xcode project.

1) Enable agvtool.

Navigate to the Build Settings pane of your target, then update it for all your build configurations as follows:

  • Set Current Project Version to a value of your choosing.

    Your Xcode project data file, project.pbxproj, includes a CURRENT_PROJECT_VERSION (Current Project Version) build setting, which specifies the current version of your project. agvtool searches project.pbxproj for CURRENT_PROJECT_VERSION. It continues running if CURRENT_PROJECT_VERSION exists and stops running, otherwise. Its value is used to update the build number.

    Note: The value of Current Project Version must be an integer or a floating point number such as 34.6. You should set this setting to 1 if you are working on a new project.

  • Set Versioning System to Apple Generic.

    By default, Xcode does not use any versioning system. Setting Versioning System to Apple Generic ensures that Xcode will include all agvtool-generated version information in your project.

2) Set up your version and build numbers.

agvtool searches your application’s Info.plist for your version and build numbers. It updates them if they exist and does nothing, otherwise. Make sure that the CFBundleVersion (Bundle version) and CFBundleShortVersionString (Bundle versions string, short) keys exist in your Info.plist as seen in Figure 3.

Note: The DYLIB_CURRENT_VERSION (Current Library Version ) build setting specifies the current build version of a library or framework. if you are building a library or framework, be sure to follow the above steps and make sure that the Build Settings pane of your target includes this setting.

Command Line

Quit Xcode, then navigate to the directory containing your .xcodeproj project file in the Terminal application before running any of the following commands. The .xcodeproj project file contains project.pbxproj, which is used by agvtool.

Updating the Version Number

To update the version number to a specific version, run

where <your_specific_version> is a number of your choosing as seen in Listing 1.

Listing 1 Update the version number to 2.0

Updating the Build Number

  • To automatically increment your build number, run


    Listing 2 Auto-increment the build number to the next highest integer

    Note: Running agvtool next-version -all increments your version number to the next highest integer value. For instance, it will update 2 to 3 and 1.3 to 2.

  • To set the build number of your application to a specific version, run

    where <your_specific_version> is a number of your choosing.


    Listing 3 Set the build number to 2.6.9

Native Version Of Sm64 Online Released For Mac

Viewing Version Numbers

  • To view the current version number, run


    Listing 4 Display the current version number

  • To view the current build number, run


    Listing 5 Display the current build number


Sm64 Rom

Document Revision History


DateNotes
2014-05-12

New document that describes how to auto-increment build and version numbers using agvtool.


Version

Copyright © 2014 Apple Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Updated: 2014-05-12

Apple MacOS X requirements

The current Apache OpenOffice supports Apple MacOS X version 10.7 (Lion) - 10.11 (El Capitan) and macOS 10.12 (Sierra) - 10.13 (High Sierra).

Hardware requirements

  • CPU : Intel Processor
  • Memory : Minimum 512 Mbytes RAM
  • Storage : At least 400 Mbytes available disk space for a default install via download
  • Graphic : 1024 x 768 or higher resolution with 16.7 million colours

Download

Get the latest Apache OpenOffice release for your MacOS X.

User Support

Please subscribe to the users mailing list. Send an empty email to users-subscribe@openoffice.apache.org and just reply to the returned email.

News and weblog

Recent news articles from the Apache OpenOffice homepage.

Recent weblog postings from the official Apache OpenOffice Blog.