Menu

Main Menu
Talk Get Daily Search

Member's Online

    User Name
    Password

    I have an extra unused PC

    Reply
    Page 2 of 2 | Prev |   1   2 |
    Bundyo | # 11 | 2009-02-01, 15:08 | Report

    Yes, for one file it makes sense. I wouldn't call one Komodo command drastical customization, but you at least escape the need to have a scratchbox installed.

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    lcuk | # 12 | 2009-02-01, 15:13 | Report

    agreed
    scratchbox was the biggest problem with my mind.

    I was learning all about linux at the time (still am) and the thought of running a system inside a system when i didn't understand the outside just made me seek out an onboard solution.

    regarding komodo, I'll read up about the commands, I did want to do something else with it for change notification (f5 to make automatic comment header including date and nick) but didn't have the energy to readup.

    for a complete system rebuild, it takes about a minute with the cpu on performance, its an ideal time to catch up in chat or read the top of slash.

    I've never thought it to be strange or unusual and most work projects in .net take longer by default

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    Bundyo | # 13 | 2009-02-01, 16:17 | Report

    Yeah, i'm working with .NET lately, our project takes about a minute to build. Anyway my Vala browser builds for about 5-10 secs in Scratchbox and that's fine with me for now

    Now SB2 is coming. Heavily limited platform, since it relies on its parent OS to do most of the work. Imagine my frustration when I discovered that I can't run it in my openSUSE 11.1 directly. Then I downloaded an Ubuntu VirtualBox image, but running an emulator in an emulator is not a good and fast experience. So I converted the VirtualBox image to fixed, mounted it as a drive, copied the contents to my partition and now i'm chrooting to it whenever i want to compile in SB2. Took me two days to figure all that out and I wonder how Maemo-SDK+ is going to help development for Fremantle if it is so tied up to the OS...

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

    Last edited by Bundyo; 2009-02-01 at 16:20.

     
    lcuk | # 14 | 2009-02-01, 16:48 | Report

    words fail me.

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    TokyoDan | # 15 | 2009-02-01, 21:38 | Report

    I wasn't going to use Windows as a dev platform for the N810. That's why I mentioned Ubuntu and Debian. I was just mentioning that I was also considering making a dual-boot machine with a Linux and Windows 7.

    Originally Posted by Bundyo View Post
    Windows as a N8x0 dev platform... that's a new one...

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks
    The Following User Says Thank You to TokyoDan For This Useful Post:
    Bundyo

     
    fixerdave | # 16 | 2009-02-02, 19:19 | Report

    I am impressed enough with Ubuntu that I, literally, bought the T-shirt... and the coffee mug, and the stress ball

    Hey, they're doing it right and deserve some cash. I'm even running it at work, a Windows shop, though I'm doing it in a virtual machine. Works great, putting all the personal stuff "off to the side."

    Speaking of virtualisation... and N810 development... has anyone built a complete Maemo development environment in a virtual machine? Now, that would be useful.

    ... Oh, never mind, Google is my friend:
    Maemo SDK VMware
    I'll grab the torrent and give it a try.

    David...

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    deadmalc | # 17 | 2009-02-02, 20:53 | Report

    Originally Posted by lcuk View Post
    I use windows.
    ..must resist
    ..must have strength ;-)

    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    qole | # 18 | 2009-02-03, 00:59 | Report

    Originally Posted by lcuk View Post
    Bundyo,

    quite simple:
    on windows
    install winscp
    install komodo-edit
    install putty
    connect to tablet which has gcc+stdc+*dev libs installed
    edit source stored on /media/mmc1/svn/liqbase/libliqbase
    run putty
    type "if make; then ./vworld; fi" and watch my app directly on tablet.

    WinSCP also has a basic text editor built-in. I like the way WinSCP lets you edit linux text files without trashing them, unlike many (most) other Windows text editors. And you can edit the files in-place, that is, you use WinSCP to get onto the tablet, then you double click on your script and it opens on your Windows desktop. You edit and hit the save button and presto, you can immediately run the script on the tablet.

    I also use Cygwin + openssh instead of putty because that gives me an X Server on my Windows box that lets me do X-forwarding... For example, when ssh'ed into my tablet from Windows (running Debian sshd, not maemo sshd), I accidentally started up the full XFce4 environment on my tablet, forwarded to my Windows box... This produced a weird result...


    Edit | Forward | Quote | Quick Reply | Thanks

     
    Page 2 of 2 | Prev |   1   2 |
vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Normal Logout