Hi,I am one of the developers.Sure you can use your editor of choice. The 
browser-based IDE is a convenient, ready-to-go solution which acts as a 
front-end for the building scripts we provide, which build the code on the 
board. The scripts can, alternatively, be reached through the command line, or 
we provide instructions to setup a cross-compiling environment using Eclipse as 
an IDE. The browser-based IDE currently is the only way to visualize the 
on-board oscilloscope.Best,Giulio



 
      From: Johannes Kroll <j-kr...@gmx.de>
 To: music-dsp@music.columbia.edu 
 Sent: Tuesday, 22 March 2016, 23:46
 Subject: Re: [music-dsp] *** GMX Spamverdacht *** Bela low-latency audio 
platform
   
On Tue, 22 Mar 2016 20:43:28 +0100
Andrew McPherson <andrew.p.mcpher...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi all,
> 
> I'd like to announce the upcoming release of Bela (http://bela.io), an 
> embedded audio/sensor platform based on the BeagleBone Black which features 
> extremely low latency (< 1ms from action to sound). 

Sounds interesting. The website says something about "browser-based IDE
built with Node.js". Can it be programmed normally in C or C++, using
whichever editor I prefer, without the browser-based stuff?
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