You can also use code::blocks IDE, and setup a custom toolchain. I did this
last year with linaro's WIndows armhf toolchain binary.


On Wed, Sep 3, 2014 at 12:27 PM, Ivan Nazarenko <ivan.nazare...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> As an alternative to eclipse-based IDEs there is the qt creator. After
> changing code, with a single command it cross-compiles (gcc-arm),
> automatically deploys the compiled code on target (though ssh), starts it
> under the remote gdb server, runs the local gdb client, and I get a full
> graphical debugger and the remote console on my desktop.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qt_Creator
>
>
> On Tue, 2 Sep 2014 18:40:44 -0700 (PDT)
> murre...@ameritech.net wrote:
>
> > I received a Beaglebone Black to develop a homework project on.  I
> plugged
> > in the board to my USB and installed the Windows driver.  I next wanted
> to
> > develop a simple "Hello world" C project and debug it on this board.  I
> > didn't want to be a Newbie so I researched how to develop programs for
> this
> > device.  So I read.  And read.  And read more.  I read all I could find
> on
> > the Beaglebone site.  I read the TI websites.  I read from Linux sites.
> I
> > read from several individual sites.  I found many "This is how I did it"
> > that had many steps and comments on how to set up a development
> > environment.  But I could not find concrete, concise steps on how to
> write
> > and debug a simple program.  As far as I could glean from the various
> > sites, this is what I need to do:
> >
> > 1.  Load Putty on my PC.
> > 2.  Establish a SSH terminal session to the board.
> > 3.  Write my program using VIM (a horrible program to drop on a novice,
> it
> > has a very steep learning curve) or nano (not much better).
> > 4.  Compile and link my program with gcc, after having to learn its
> > command-line interface.
> > 5.  Run my program under the gnu debugger, another command-line tool
> with a
> > steep learning curve.
> >
> > It will take days or weeks to learn the tools to develop a 10 minute
> > program.  This is how I debugged in the 1980's.  There has got to be a
> > better environment than this.  I currently develop under QNX Momentics
> and
> > TI Code Composer.  They are both Eclipse based.  Code Composer requires a
> > JTAG module, but QNX uses the GNU Cross Compiler and GNU Debug for
> program
> > development.  Editing and compiling is done on the PC, and for debugging,
> > it copies my executable to the target system and runs it under the
> debugger
> > using the UI for setting breakpoints, single-stepping viewing registers
> and
> > variable, etc.
> >
> > So, now my question.  Is there a easy to use, Windows, graphical
> integrated
> > development environment for developing native Angstrom Linux programs for
> > this board?
> >
> >
> > --
> > For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
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