Showing 7 open source projects for "windows command code"

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    pFFh

    pFFh

    a self-contained development environment for embedded systems.

    pFFh is a programming language that allows you to launch applications on embedded systems safely, quickly and comfortably. pFFh runs on the target system, combining operation as a command interpreter and code compiler. We can say that pFFh behaves like an operating system on the board under development. All pFFh needs is a serial or USB-serial channel to communicate, and through it, receive and process console commands, either from a keyboard or from files sent from a desktop computer. At present, pFFh is implemented for the PIC18FxxQ4x/Q7x family of microcontrollers. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 2

    amforth: Interpreter on Microcontrollers

    amforth is an extendible interpreter on microcontrollers

    amforth is an extendable command interpreter running on AVR ATmega and TI MSP430 microcontrollers. The Risc-V and ARM architectures are ascending. Turnkey actions for IoT workloads are possible as well. The command language is close to the Forth 2012 standard.
    Downloads: 9 This Week
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  • 3
    FlashForth is a standalone Forth system for the Microchip PIC 18, 24, 30, 33 and the Atmel Atmega series of microcontrollers. A Forth system with interpreter, compiler, assembler and multitasker is provided.
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    Downloads: 19 This Week
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  • 4
    Ficl - small systems scripting with OO
    Ficl is a lightweight, embeddable scripting language designed to be incorporated into other programs, and especially embedded systems that may have memory and OS constraints. Applications include scripting, hardware bring-up, rapid prototyping, and system extensions. Unlike Lua or Python, Ficl acts as a component of your system - you feed it stuff to do, it does the stuff, and comes back to you for more. You can export compiled code to Ficl, execute Ficl code from your compiled code, or...
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    Downloads: 5 This Week
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    DruidBSD is a FreeBSD micro-distribution that supports CD/DVD, USB, and HD booting into a Live BSD Distribution.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 6
    Evolved from Win32Forth 6.01. Code runs ten times faster on older cpu's. Absolute addressing makes the VM simple to understand. Five stacks and demos showing why modern Forths need at least 4, and preferably 5 stacks to be viable in today's computer
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 7
    OS for embedded and mobile devices based on tiny byte-code interpreter and FORTH language compiler (into platform-independent byte-code). In other word its smallest programming language realization works on any type computer with any OS
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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