0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Well it might be best to rename it back to its original name (see the zip file if you forgot the exact name), becuase I don't think it's meant to be changed.Oh and welcome to the forums by the way
I have been trying to install ndless onto my touch pad Nspire, I have downloaded the ndless file and transferred it to my calculator, The installer isn't able to be transferred with the folder (it says some unsupported were not transferred) and when I try to move just the installer it starts to install it but then my calculator resets and the connection software says connection has been lost and to try again. When I try to transfer it from my documents to my calculator it says that it is an unsupported file and won't transfer it. Can anyone help me?
From what I think, the file formats and link with the actual app is hard-coded, so basically Ndless sees gbc4cx and gbc4cx2 or whatever alternate name you give it as different programs.
Thank you for your help! I renamed it back to gbc4cx (also in the cfg) and it now works kind of. Now if I open game.gb.tns, it just starts gbc4cx. I don't know if this is the whole file association, because I thought it would open it with gbc4cx, but this is cool too
gbc4nspire has not yet been updated to open the .gb file clicked. nDoom, nPlayer and NESpire have.Maintaining gbc4nspire is quite difficult since calc84maniac unfortunately lost its source code.
Quote from: ExtendeD on February 13, 2012, 08:25:17 amgbc4nspire has not yet been updated to open the .gb file clicked. nDoom, nPlayer and NESpire have.Maintaining gbc4nspire is quite difficult since calc84maniac unfortunately lost its source code.Ok, thanks for you answer!Another question: Maybe someone can make it possible to link your devices with the cable you got with the calculator. Just like with the gameboy connection cable, you would be able to eg. trade pokemon, fight eachother etc.
They can indeed do something - but they haven't done so in nearly five years, and they have consistently crossed our right to use the hardware we own the way we see fit.They focus on teachers and test regulation authorities, not on users.