Hi,

My big code compiles properly in eclipse. As you said I started with hello 
world and small codes. My problems became only measuring elapsed time. With 
small codes, just to measure elapsed time it still doesn't work. I tried 
with clock() as i said but the elapsed time showed in the terminal is 
wrong. Now I am trying with the code supplied by you, because i would like 
to try with gettimeofday but errors commented before.

I will put my compiler, linker and assembler later. I am not in my personal 
computer now.

really thanks for your help.

El viernes, 4 de octubre de 2013 16:59:35 UTC+2, Dieter Wirz escribió:
>
> Hi Ignacio 
> On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 10:06 AM,  <ignacio...@gmail.com <javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
> > My aim is program in ansi c my beaglebone black. I am using an ubuntu vm 
> under mac os. 
> > 
> > I am new in ubuntu and eclipse and this is the main problem, i guess :-S 
> > 
> > I have a model that i would like to run into BB but i have problems to 
> measure the elapsed time, i tried before with clock(), but looks like it 
> doesn't measure properly the time. For this i am trying with gettimeofday, 
> but i have the problems that i commented previously. 
> > 
> > Looks like if eclipse could not link time.h and for this appear these 
> errors. But maybe i am wrong 
> Eclipse  with an installed crosscompiler is only one way to go and it 
> certainly makes sense if you have a huge Project with thousands of 
> lines of code, X, etc. But I usually code only small terminal programs 
> (in ANSI C) that read in some ports, write to some ports, do some 
> calculations and write the results to a excel readable text file. For 
> such problems I am too lazy to install Eclipse with all the gnuaebi 
> etc. stuff.... 
> So, I edit and compile my programs directly on BB, usually over ssh 
> and sftp (usually from my Mac, with Cyberduck). The only thing you 
> need on BB is gcc and if you have a bit bigger projects make. 
>
> Starting with "Hello World" is always a good idea.... 
> Connect to your BB with ssh 
> nano helloworld.c 
> type in your code, quit and save with "ctrl x" 
> gcc -Wall helloworld.c -o helloworld 
> And run your program with 
> ./helloworld 
> you need the ./ for running terminal programs in the same folder.... 
>
> Have fun! 
>

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