&xwp; contains original or modified code
developed by the following people (in alphabetical order):
- ARAKAWA Atsushi, Japan (
arakaw@ibm.net
):
porting APM power-off code for &xwp;
- John Buckley, UK: better NEWOBJ.CMD for &xwp;
- Monte Copeland, IBM: exception handling (1993)
- Lars Erdmann, Germany: MB3-click-to-MB1-double-click (2000)
- Chris Hanson, MIT, USA: Extended Attributes handling (1995) (EALIB.ZIP at Hobbes)
- Gilles Kohl: C string handling routines (1992)
- Ekkehard Kraemer, Germany: hard drive detection found at
http://zebra.asta.fh-weingarten.de/os2/Snippets/Howt6364.HTML
- Dmitry Kubov (
Dmitry@north.cs.msu.su
): pager fixes
- Dan Libby: PM container helper function found at
http://zebra.asta.fh-weingarten.de/os2/Snippets/Isdr8319.HTML
(1996)
- Kim Rasmussen, Marc Fiammante, John Currier, Anthony Cruise: exception handling and
debugging code (EXCEPTQ.ZIP at Hobbes;
\helpers\except.c
and
debug.c
)
- Kai Uwe Rommel, Germany: DosQProcStatus handling code (1992-94) (PROC.ZIP at Hobbes)
- Roman Stangl, Austria: rebooting OS/2, taken from
EDM/2 vol. 5, issue 9;
his APM/2 code (from apm2v14.zip at Hobbes); some code for exception handling
and the &xwp; hook has been taken from Program Commander/2
- Mark Stern, Belgium: C string handling routines (1993)
- Uri J. Stern, USA (?): killing the tasklist window
(http://zebra.asta.fh-weingarten.de/os2/Snippets/Howt8881.HTML)
&xwp; also uses parts of the SFL package,
Copyright (C) 1991-99 iMatix Corporation (http://www.imatix.com).
&xwp;'s XML support is built around expat 1.95.1 by James Clark,
(C) 1998-2000 Thai Open Source Software Center Ltd.
(http://expat.sourceforge.net/).
If anybody thinks that I have forgotten him or her, this is not intentional.
Drop me a note and I'll add you to this page.
The information about the &cfgsys; settings is mostly based on the
OS/2 command reference and on the
descriptions in the CNFGINFO package available at Hobbes.
Most of the information about the WPS classes is also taken from the
OS/2 Warp 3 Developer's Toolkit, some of it I've found out myself;
many class descriptions have been contributed by various users.