I would suggest Objective Development's AVR MacPack package - comes with both AVRGCC 3 and 4, which is good because 3 produces *far* smaller code in many cases. You can switch between versions with a shell script.
Releases of the MacPack track pretty closely with the WinAVR distribution for Windows. http://www.obdev.at/products/avrmacpack/index.html -Randy On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 6:07 PM, Peter Harrison <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi > > I have started to use a Mac for the first time. A sort of Geeky mid-life > crisis thing I expect. Anyway, I want to gather some microcontroller > development tools and decided to start with the AVR. I have used these in > the past and like them a lot. I am charting my progress here: > > http://www.micromouseonline.com/blog > > I would be pathetically grateful if any of you could take a look and offer > any words of encouragement or advice for using any of these tools on a Mac > or links to other information that I might have missed. I have looked at > pages like these: > > http://www.ladyada.net/learn/avr/setup-mac.html > http://www.harbaum.org/till/macavr/index.shtml > http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~mseeman/resources/macmicro.html > > And I have found the graphical programmer AVRFuses > > http://www.vonnieda.org/software/avrfuses > > which acts as a front end for avrdude. > > So far, it has been a bit of a struggle to sort some stuff out. Seems I was > spoiled badly by tools like AVR Studio, CodeVision and WinAVR. > > Pete Harrison > > > _______________________________________________ > AVR-chat mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/avr-chat > _______________________________________________ AVR-chat mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/avr-chat
