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Ndless is basically a jailbreak for your Nspire. It overrides a part of the system and allows user-made native code programs to run. Ndless programs are written in either ARM assembly or C. Most people like to use C because assembly is just a lot harder.
Most people like to use C because assembly is just a lot harder.
You can find some tutorials for linux and other Unixes on hackspire, if you're using Windows, I strongly recommend you to setup a linux VM or dual-boot.
Quote from: Vogtinator on November 05, 2014, 06:46:27 amYou can find some tutorials for linux and other Unixes on hackspire, if you're using Windows, I strongly recommend you to setup a linux VM or dual-boot.Or download the pre-built ndless SDK for Windows
Quote from: aeTIos on November 05, 2014, 06:05:03 amMost people like to use C because assembly is just a lot harder.*cough*ASM isn't really harder, it's just a different way to think. C (and everything else) on the Nspire involves loads of low level hardware access anyway so it doesn't really abstract much.
There is the possibility to provide a prebuilt cygwin environment, but I guess that's very close to a VM or boot2docker.
Cygwin needs admin rights? I'm fairly sure it doesn't.
Quote from: Vogtinator on November 05, 2014, 04:56:53 pmCygwin needs admin rights? I'm fairly sure it doesn't.It does to install. I would know, I've tried Back to the original question: I think it's been answered, so useless discussion about the SDK is useless.