in the binutils src dir exec: "make do-install-html"
you'll get quite a bit of documentation in ${PREFIX}/share/doc
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> -Original Message-
> From:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> org] On Behalf Of Joerg Wunsch
> Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2007 3:57 PM
> To: avr-gcc-list@nongnu.org
> Subject: Re: [avr-gcc-list] avr-gcc 'documentation'
> So f
On Wed, 2007-02-28 at 23:57 +0100, Joerg Wunsch wrote:
> I don't mind, as long as it's really "live". I know the Wiki from
> www.mikrocontroller.net is, but that's German only.
Which is great for German speakers, but overall it alienates more than
95% of people.
> So far, the best
> internatio
David McNab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> WormFood on the irc.freenode.net#avr kindly tossed me a link to the
> gnu 'as' manual. But he did mention that it was buried deeply on the
> gnu site, and that it took him/her several attempts and searches to
> find it.
Well, if you've got WinAVR, it comes
On Wed, 2007-02-28 at 15:21 +0100, Joerg Wunsch wrote:
> David McNab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > - avr-as pseudo-ops - there seems to be no thorough list of
> > these. For example, I had to look through list archives to learn
> > how to declare a buffer in SRAM via the '.skip' pseudo-op
>
David McNab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> - avr-as pseudo-ops - there seems to be no thorough list of
> these. For example, I had to look through list archives to learn
> how to declare a buffer in SRAM via the '.skip' pseudo-op
That's available in the GNU assembler manual. Note that the GNU
a
On Tuesday 27 February 2007 20:59, David McNab wrote:
> On Tue, 2007-02-27 at 18:59 -0500, Gary French wrote:
> > in the binutils src dir exec: "make do-install-html"
> > you'll get quite a bit of documentation in ${PREFIX}/share/doc
for my chain I used binutils 2.17 and gcc 4.1.2 from a GNU mirro
On Wed, Feb 28, 2007 at 10:27:42AM +1300, David McNab wrote:
>
> But - I've been having a hard time with learning avr-gcc, largely due to
> the way the documentation (or lack of it) is organised.
>
> To give some examples:
> - avr-as pseudo-ops - there seems to be no thorough list of these. For
On Tue, 2007-02-27 at 16:35 -0500, David VanHorn wrote:
>
> What I want to ask is - what's the current thinking within the
> avr-gcc
> community with respect to documentation, and the task of
> making avr-gcc
> approachable to newcomers? Is good new
On Tue, 2007-02-27 at 18:59 -0500, Gary French wrote:
> in the binutils src dir exec: "make do-install-html"
> you'll get quite a bit of documentation in ${PREFIX}/share/doc
Huh?
There's no such target in the debian binutils-avr source package
makefiles.
Can you point me to a binutils-avr distri
in the binutils src dir exec: "make do-install-html"
you'll get quite a bit of documentation in ${PREFIX}/share/doc
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David McNab wrote:
To give some examples:
- avr-as pseudo-ops - there seems to be no thorough list of these. For
example, I had to look through list archives to learn how to declare
a buffer in SRAM via the '.skip' pseudo-op
Google is your friend! :-)
Googling "GNU Assembler" gives one.
What I want to ask is - what's the current thinking within the avr-gcc
community with respect to documentation, and the task of making avr-gcc
approachable to newcomers? Is good newbie-friendly documentation seen as
a valued goal within the community?
I would welcome it, and I'd be interested
Hi,
I've already embarrassed myself on this list with my early naive
questions, as I battle to migrate from PIC to AVR, and I guess I'm going
to embarrass myself again.
What I want to ask is - what's the current thinking within the avr-gcc
community with respect to documentation, and the task of
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