Re: Compiling code
- From: "RumpelStiltSkin" <fablesRus@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 2008 15:00:54 -0700
"Tim Wescott" <tim@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:S5mdnS-nkLjEPyTVnZ2dnUVZ_oLinZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
andersod2 wrote:The schematic shows a programmer port on there, so you might not needThe cheapest way to get a PIC programmer is to get one of the paraller-port ones -- but that requires a compatible parallel port.
an eval board to do the programming...may just be able to plug the
cable in and program the code right into it...PIC should have a lot of
different tools you can download for compiling and programming it
yourself...I would look for a PIC developers site that is for
beginners which should exists somewhere I'm guessing given the
popularity of PICs. With the right compiler (which I'm guessing there
is a free version of) and programmer (also should be a free one), you
could do it yourself without much trouble I have to believe. I only
know AVR's which is basically the equivalent, and it has all the above
mentioned tools for free. And there is a lot of support on
avrfreaks.com specifically for that, so I gotta believe someone could
help you do this easily from a PIC equivalent site.
Eval boards have programmers built in, which is what motivated that suggestion. The ones you get from Microchip are very very nice, and cost lots of $$.
There's gotta be a usable, cheap USB/PIC programmer out there, though.
Its called the ICD2. Can debug or program PICs.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Compiling code
- From: Tim Wescott
- Re: Compiling code
- References:
- Compiling code
- From: Mike Burch
- Re: Compiling code
- From: Tim Wescott
- Compiling code
- Prev by Date: Re: Compiling code
- Next by Date: spam
- Previous by thread: Re: Compiling code
- Next by thread: Re: Compiling code
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|