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windows is very bad at supporting developers, and c and c++ development especially so. other systems have all these toolchain prerequisites installed by default (or, if not, easily available via package manager and official packages, which take five minutes or so to install). windows was not designed to support c and c++ development, however, and all microsoft's attempts at adding it have been an afterthought that's perpetually non-standards-compliant.so no, there isn't any other way unless you're willing to switch operating systems, basically.
Are you really wanting to do C++? How about trusty old C?I've never tried using C on the TI-84CE so I cannot speak to it. Although this capability really has me interested in purchasing a TI84CE. However, C on the TI-89, 89TI, 92+, and V200 is amazingly easy. Simply install GCC4TI or TIGCC on your PC and that's it... you're good to go.
I think if you're using Windows 10, there is an "Ubuntu subsystem" that you can use.
Installing C++ on Windows seems simple, compared to the Nspire Version. Handling it is not so simple...But using another OS for using C++ is not what I would tellm user friendly, it means a 2 stage way and handling linux is not a thing that I get used in short time. But thanks for your answer.
A important aspect for a language is the acceptance of it. Nicest language is not attractive to me when I don't find much support and few ppl who uses it. So I think C++ has some usage for Nspire but C I don't see so often. And programming on the old calculators with bw and non lighted lcd I don't like. Thanks for your hints.
Quote from: Chirlian on February 20, 2017, 09:27:10 amInstalling C++ on Windows seems simple, compared to the Nspire Version. Handling it is not so simple...But using another OS for using C++ is not what I would tellm user friendly, it means a 2 stage way and handling linux is not a thing that I get used in short time. But thanks for your answer.as i said, either going through the steps of setting up mingw et. al or just using literally any desktop / server operating system other than windows is necessary for getting this to work. windows has "C and C++ support", but it's an afterthought that has never conformed to the standard everybody else does.or i guess you can try to struggle with whatever frankenstein of gpl-stripped code and ancient bash it is they're calling an "ubuntu subsystem" on windows 10, but don't expect that to go anywhere either.
Quote from: Chirlian on February 20, 2017, 09:27:10 amA important aspect for a language is the acceptance of it. Nicest language is not attractive to me when I don't find much support and few ppl who uses it. So I think C++ has some usage for Nspire but C I don't see so often. And programming on the old calculators with bw and non lighted lcd I don't like. Thanks for your hints.C is a much more sensible choice for this kind of thing, honestly. the potential benefits of C++ over C can be summed up as higher-level abstractions and auto-pointers for handling memory, which can lead to non-trivial overhead on a system this tight on resources. take those away, and you're left with what's essentially an out-dated C fork.Phew, thats beyond my really simple english. Means that you recommend the older c? Infos about installing c I found only at hackspire (c++).as for language acceptance, C is still very much a relevant language (see http://githut.info/). whether it's used the most for this particular platform shouldn't be relevent except in terms of library support.