![]() ![]() If you are really paranoid or a Microsoft hater, the completely MIT licensed build of VS Code ( VS Codium) is a possibility - keep in mind that some extension might not be avaialble (but there are ways around it). fchkĪnother vote for VS Code plus the mentioned extensions. There is even a version officially provided by ARM itself: A cheap JTAG probe is here: plus the adapter for the now-standard 10 pin connector: No problems with OpenOCD. ![]() GCC for ARM is very good and mature - no need to worry. The whole package gives you zero licensing costs and maximal freedom. ( ) FTDI ft2232 based adapters tend to be quite cheap. gcc for armv7 (most likely included in your distribution) Any JTAG adapter suitable for OpenOCD. OpenOCD (most likely included in your distribution) 5. emIDE, what are your thoughts? Thank you - this forum is always such a big help Simon PS: I'm using a GD32E230 ARM Cortex-M23. Then I have heard that the ARMclang compiler generates better optimized code than GCC. ASM code view is not mentioned though but since it has "next assembly instruction" step I guess it is there. But looking at emIDE it looks like it has all debugging feature that I would need: core registers, peripheral registers, memory. My biggest concern regarding moving to a GCC-based environment are the lack of debugging feature and the compiler's ability to optimize (in particular reduce the image size). ![]() I have been using Keil for now but kinda forgot that my license is non commercial, limited to 32kB, and even the cheapest license costs an arm (pun INTENDED ). Hi Apologies if the subject has been covered - I did search but only found old posts and I am sure this open source IDE has grown a lot for the past few years. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |