Well... the game I'm making is called "Fashion Police" and it's intended for people who know very little about their own computers. So I really want to be able to set it up so they can just download one thing from me, rather than having to download LOVE as well.
I get what you're saying about the love.app being in the /Applications directory. But when I tried to look there, there was no folder name LOVE and no love.app file sitting inside it.
As for the files saved using the love.filesystem. The files don't exist using Finder. So when I load the game up a 2nd time and it tries to find those files, it fails and crashes. So no... it can't seem to load up the saved files.
dmg's are disc images. They usually come with an autorun that presents your applications folder and the program to drag into the applications folder though as the installer. Good luck reading/writing dmg's on a non HFS+ filesystem though.
Sucessful ports have been made to Windows and Linux (admitedly the Linux one is not fully functional, but it does the job and the Windows driver is complete).
Luiji wrote:I believe that if you can open DMGs, it is quite simple, since .APPs are just file folders.
What do you mean "if"? Is this something that needs to be set in user preferences or something? On my friends' Macs I wasn't able to see any "love.app" file from the LOVE dmg file, even when I had dragged and dropped the Love.dmg file to the applications directory.
jennsand wrote:What do you mean "if"? Is this something that needs to be set in user preferences or something? On my friends' Macs I wasn't able to see any "love.app" file from the LOVE dmg file, even when I had dragged and dropped the Love.dmg file to the applications directory.
You are supposed to mount DMG's. Usually by double clicking. Also try right clicking and selecting mount. They show up on your desktop as tiny disk drives you can open.
Thanks for the help. I think the problem was that although I was mounting the dmg, the love.app file/folder was showing up as just "love" on my friends' Macs. I assume that's cause normally Macs automatically disable showing file extensions? I know Windows does that usually.