An old experiment for a planned (never finished) sequel to my Windows 94 project (https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/356585542/) that was never released. The prototype is here (https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/537976169/), but it's almost nothing and probably will never be released. A lot of stuff I made ended up being used in my Windows 11 simulator (https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/544851591/) Just messing around with stamped windows for a potential revamp of Windows 94. l'll just dub it Windows codename Baltimore. A demo kind of thing. Not the actual simulator. My progress will be seen here. Right now, when the green flag is clicked, a window moves around the screen with the bar title, height, and width varying. There are minor glitches. I am also trying to work on a protocol so that more than one window can have text at a time.
Released as part of an effort to share significant unshared projects. Last edited 8/21/2021. There is a little lag on the text rendering, but it will has to do. The current version of the parody (without this window engine) is at this link: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/356585542/ Credit to @-Rex- for https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/349634648/, his wonderful stamp text engine. Credit to @ChromeCat_test for Very fast rectangle filler (https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/531053413/editor/) A whole bunch of credit to Microsoft for Microsoft Sans Serif, which I injected into stamp font engine. I basically have the window separated into "chunks" that are stamped. The pen text engine then writes in the title bar. Hoping to add a hitbox system and turn this into a more full-blown window system for future Windows 94. I will likely dub it 94.1 as a play on 8.1.