06-06-2008 07:34 AM
Yes it is.. 🙂
What is wrong with the size?
Oh... the microsuff syndrom... The bigger the better.. Well.. that's false!
Many of the programming languages were much smaller then 10 MB. I remember SmallTalk, APL, Turbo-C, all smaller then 2 or 3 MB. Even the early Java.. 🙂
So, yes, it's free (read the license) and it's 10MB 😄
RayR
06-06-2008 07:36 AM
06-06-2008 07:56 AM
06-06-2008 09:33 AM - edited 06-06-2008 09:37 AM
Ben wrote:
I'll give you my wife's answer to this question.
"Open the want-ads and figure out which language is in the greatest demand."
Ben
Or the one thats paying the most Money! 🙂 - Depending on how you look at it
I came from an electronics background and most text languages I have come across are all hardware related...Verilog for example.
Texas instruments and Atmel (I think) done some quite cool USB stick dev kits, including their IDE for about £20.
06-06-2008 09:59 AM
It is quite improper to say that a programming language IS n MBytes.... Maybe you're talking about the compiler/IDE/libraries....?
@Pnt wrote:
Python is only 10 Mbytes and it is freeware ?!
Am i missing something ?
06-06-2008 10:07 AM
Graziano wrote:About C/C++, you have to consider that if you do some embedded hardware, if you'll deal with microcontrollers (both 8 bits and 32 bits), you'll have to learn C/C++.
I like Atmel micros, and there you find a great IDE for C and AVR 8 bit micros (for AVR32 it's C/C++, but it's quite new....).
06-06-2008 11:29 AM
@Pnt wrote:
Python is only 10 Mbytes and it is freeware ?!
Am i missing something ?