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my underlying concern, (and not being able to articulate it correctly) was that these "binaries" are for x86 hardware, if i am understanding correctly is not what the RPI needs. I never would have come to that on my own. Thank you, that gives me something to try. or why i would use something or do something. Ive read what i could find but its like reading a dictionary. So a course? a kit? a book? a web resource? (it ran within its own proprietary shell for the kit.) no compiling (which compiles at run time)Īnd another proprietary language for an old fischertechnic robotics kit. everything i've ever coded was directly into memory like with a monitor program (assembly language to machine code) or.Ĭommodore and Apple basic. i've never personally used such a process. What I'm neading is an understanding of the compiling process itself. as its not so much "things that need to be typed out" but settings and features or whatnot. even the file manager in the GUI is acting stupid and will suddenly close when im renaming copying or moving a file or directory but that's another issue for another day.(and topic)Īlso in response to the suggestion to copy paste from the read-me. It seams im having a lot of lock up issues. It looks similar to what i remember but have not been able to figure out much of the controls yet due to the lock ups. however the program crashes with some strange errors.
#Xtree gold for dos free download install
I did find and install ytree successfully. I am aware that Unix tree has a Unix compatible distro however it is x86 build which according to my understanding will not work with raspberry Pi.
#Xtree gold for dos free download code
Without learning all the intricacies of “C” code I need to know enough to compile code already provided. Though i understand a little, it's not enough to do what i want. I'm not a c-programmer, not really a programmer at all, more of a hardware tech. They say someplace that this source code is written in ansi-c which i am assuming genie is compliant of gz extension i don't know if that's right or wrong. I don't even know what i'm looking at while looking at the unpacked source distribution.īTW there are two files to chose from. Much less set it correctly to compile the source code provided from UnixTree. I need a solid starting point, as of right now, i don't even know exactly what i need to know to even use genie. That's as far as my experience can take me alone. (Includes genie) and I have downloaded the source files from UnixTree and unpacked them onto a USB hard drive formatted with ext4
#Xtree gold for dos free download full
loaded with the full software distribution. So here I sit with my Raspberry-Pi-3B+ as my only personal computer. It just did it when you ran it like in basic. This did not require compilation to work.
#Xtree gold for dos free download serial
This ran on ms-dos 3+ and used a serial interface to the hardware component. It used nesting vocabulary definitions (like russian babushka dolls) to create complex "words" that contained simpler (subroutine) words that contained even simpler motion commands like up1 and down1 to activate servo1, and sw1 to read the status of switch 1. The only higher level language I ever used was something proprietary provided by National Radio Institute with a robotic Fischertechnik kit. The only things I coded in where some assembly language with a plug-in monitor cartridge on a commodore 64 for some machine control applications (hobby project), and of course commodore and apple basic. the code was just way to cryptic for me to deal with. But it was way over my head so i never followed through. it just something i do to escape and have a bit of fun. (Joke) computing has become a bit of a hobby for me now that my line of work has not even followed that.
#Xtree gold for dos free download windows
However my technical prowess extended around the hardware aspects of windows system building back when dos and windows where still an item. when i saw the availability of the UnixTree clone package it wa a no-brainer to me. and i can see that such a keyboard shortcut driven files manager would be ever so helpful to me as i am learning things on the raspberry. It was a indispensable tool in my arsenal. I used xtree gold extensively back in the day. My long term goal remains in flux at this point yet to be clearly defined.īefore you ask "why", allow me to explain a bit… My mid game goal is to have a working build of UnixTree for the Raspberry Pi