I've placed new 3.4.10 packages for i586 (Pentium) and for x86_64 (AMD64) in the opensuse directory. Those are built on "Tumbleweed" 32bit and 64bit. Also I have enabled "sysstat" on the Pentium and AMD64 machine using: zypper install sysstat systemctl enable sysstat systemctl start sysstat so that "sar -r" shows free memory on the machines. "cursel" runs fine on the i586 with 1GB of RAM using the latest Linux kernel. "cursel" also builds and runs fine (and compiles much faster) on the modern AMD64...
I succesfully installed SUSE Tumbleweed with the Linux 6.17.6 kernel on both Intel pentium (physical hardware 32bit) and AMD Ryzen (physical hardware 64bit). SUSE Tumbleweed is available on both 32bit and 64bit (see https://www.opensuse.org/). It appears that SUSE Leap 16 with the new "Agama" installer is only 64bit but I have to check later. Anyway I do NOT suggest or encourage you to upgrade from SLES15 (not at all). In fact, I will certainly continue to support all versions of Slackware Linux...
Add OpenBSD 7.7 + old Dutch text
Thanks for the feedback. SUSE SLES 15 is SUSE Linux Entreprise Server. I will test first on OpenSUSE (which is related to SUSE SLES). The OpenSUSE project has Desktop and Server OS, I'll first give it a try with objc 3.4.10 (which is the latest version of Portable Object Compiler) and cursel 1.0.2 (latest version from https://sourceforge.net/projects/cursel) on OpenSUSE Tumbleweed or OpenSUSE Leap. Tumbleweed and Leap are available both in x86 32 bit and 64 bit. From my perspective it is most important...
Added objc-3.4.10 package. Test code in "make check" (test objut.m file) for computing Legendre Symbol.
Add LegrendreTest to Unit Test
unittest: TestSuite class
Add OpenBSD7.7 to list of Platforms.txt