1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
|
CATSFC version 1.12, 2012-12-31
A Super Nintendo emulator for the Supercard DSTWO.
Based on:
* Snes9x 1.43, by the Snes9x team (with research by the ZSNES folks, anomie,
zsKnight, etc.)
* NDSSFC 1.06, by the Supercard team (porting to the MIPS processor)
* BAGSFC, by BassAceGold (improving over NDSSFC)
* CATSFC, by ShadauxCat (improving over BAGSFC)
# Compiling
(If you downloaded the plugin ready-made, you can safely skip this section.
In this case, go to `# Installing`.)
Compiling CATSFC is best done on Linux. Make sure you have access to a Linux
system to perform these steps.
## The DS2 SDK
To compile CATSFC, you need to have the Supercard team's DS2 SDK.
The Makefile expects it at `/opt/ds2sdk`, but you can move it anywhere,
provided that you update the Makefile's `DS2SDKPATH` variable to point to it.
For best results, download version 0.13 of the DS2 SDK, which will have the
MIPS compiler (`gcc`), extract it to `/opt/ds2sdk`, follow the instructions,
then download version 1.2 of the DS2 SDK and extract its files into
`opt/ds2sdk`, overwriting version 0.13.
## The MIPS compiler (`gcc`)
You also need the MIPS compiler from the DS2 SDK.
The Makefile expects it at `/opt/mipsel-4.1.2-nopic`, but you can move it
anywhere, provided that you update the Makefile's `CROSS` variable to point to
it.
## Making the plugin
To make the plugin, `catsfc.plg`, use the `cd` command to change to the
directory containing your copy of the CATSFC source, then type
`make clean; make`. `catsfc.plg` should appear in the same directory.
# Installing
To install the plugin to your storage card after compiling it, copy
`catsfc.plg`, `catsfc.ini` and `catsfc.bmp` to the card's `_dstwoplug`
directory. Then, copy the source directory's CATSFC subdirectory to the
root of the card.
# Cheats
The format accepted by the "Load a cheat file" function is equivalent to the
old format used in Mightymo's BSNES Cheat Code Pack.
1. Download the BSNES Cheat Code Pack at
<http://www.mightymo.net/downloads.html>. It will be a zip archive.
2. Open the zip file, with WinZip, WinRAR or the built-in zip extension in
the operating system on your computer.
3. In the zip file, open the folder called *BSNES Cheat Code Pack*, then
the one called *BSNES v0.51-0.74 Cheat Code Pack*.
4. Open your microSD card's CATSFC folder, then descend into gamecht.
5. Drag the cheat code files from the zip archive to the card's gamecht
folder.
6. In the card's gamecht directory, create two folders. Name the first one
*a-m* and the second one *n-z*. Drag the cheat files from the games whose
name starts with A to M into *a-m* and the rest into *n-z*.
This is because the directory display does not handle more than 512 files.
To add cheats to the menu in a game, first load the game, then use the Cheats
menu's "Load a cheat file" option. The option can be touched using the
Touch Screen, but does not activate the menu. So press A.
# The font
The font used by CATSFC is now similar to the Pictochat font. To modify it,
see `source/font/README.txt`.
# Translations
Translations for CATSFC may be submitted to the author(s) under many forms,
one of which is the Github pull request. To complete a translation, you will
need to do the following:
* Open `CATSFC/system/language.msg`.
* Copy what's between `STARTENGLISH` and `ENDENGLISH` and paste it at the end
of the file.
* Change the tags. For example, if you want to translate to German, the tags
will become `STARTGERMAN` and `ENDGERMAN`.
* Translate each of the messages, using the lines starting with `#MSG_` as a
guide to the context in which the messages will be used.
* Edit `source/nds/message.h`. Find `enum LANGUAGE` and add the name of your
language there. For the example of German, you would add this at the end of
the list:
```
,
GERMAN
```
* Still in `source/nds/message.h`, just below `enum LANGUAGE`, you will find
`extern char* lang[` *some number* `]`. Add 1 to that number.
* Edit `source/nds/gui.c`. Find `char *lang[` *some number* `] =`.
Add the name of your language, in the language itself. For the example of
German, you would add this at the end of the list:
```
,
"Deutsch"
```
* Still in `source/nds/gui.c`, find `char* language_options[]`, which is below
the language names. Add an entry similar to the others, with the last number
plus 1. For example, if the last entry is `, (char *) &lang[2]`, yours would
be `, (char *) &lang[3]`.
* Still in `source/nds/gui.c`, find `case CHINESE_SIMPLIFIED`. Copy the lines
starting at the `case` and ending with `break`, inclusively. Paste them
before the `}`. Change the language name and tags, and update the `cmplen`
to be the length of the `START` tag. For the example of German, you would
use `cmplen= 11;`, because that's the length of `STARTGERMAN`:
```
case GERMAN:
strcpy(start, "STARTGERMAN");
strcpy(end, "ENDGERMAN");
cmplen = 11;
break;
```
Compile again, copy the plugin and your new `language.msg` to your card
under `CATSFC/system`, and you can now select your new language in CATSFC!
|