wabbitemu
toolchain
wabbitemu | toolchain | |
---|---|---|
9 | 12 | |
274 | 483 | |
- | 0.2% | |
10.0 | 8.1 | |
over 1 year ago | 22 days ago | |
C | C | |
MIT License | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
wabbitemu
- Wabbitemu
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[2022 Day 1][Z80 Assembly] Going to try to solve this year on a TI83
Yes, I use the wabbitemu emulator to test the code locally. The most important thing about that is that I don't have to remove the batteries to reset the calculator if I have an error that bricks it. I have dumped the rom from my own calculator though, so given that the emulator is accurate, I should be observing the exact same behaviour as on my physical calculator.
- CDA wil verbod op mobieltjes op basis- en middelbare scholen
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TI-83 Emulator?
theres wabbitemu http://wabbitemu.org/
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What can't you believe STILL exists?
When I was in school we used wabbitemu as a literal TI-84 emulator. Just download the official ROM from TI’s website lmao.
- My friend borrowed my 100$ calculator and returned an identical broken one
- Calculator question
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Is it legal to use the rom image that Wabbitemu makes?
Years ago when I used Wabbitemu it downloaded a "ROM" from the official website, so it was(maybe) legal to use, but not copy (due to copyright restrictions). At some point TI took action to block those downloads and I haven't used TI since before then, so I'm not sure what they do now.
toolchain
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TI-84+CE Toolchain v11.1 Release
Download: https://github.com/CE-Programming/toolchain/releases/latest
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Has anyone wrote a C++ for series TI graphic calculator? If so van you describes how you did that and the experience?
if you're talking about the CE series of calculators, then people have been, and still are, creating lots of programs using the community toolchain, and despite the fact that the architecture is eZ80, a clang-based compiler has been developed (llvm backend) and so C and C++ is available.
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I want to create my own apps, but what programming language do you need to use to write those?
If you're talking about the TI-84 Plus CE, you can create powerful programs in C (and some C++) with the community toolchain.
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Programmatic Communication between Plugged-In Calc and PC
The C toolchain can help you with that: https://github.com/CE-Programming/toolchain/releases/tag/v10.2 You may need to get one of the USB branches.
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How can I use a wenos d1 mini as a wifi adapter for a ti84 ce?
I'm working on a library called srldrvce for using USB serial adapters with the CE. Unfortunately, it's not released yet, but you can build it from source from the srldrvce-rewrite branch of the C toolchain. In theory, there are supposed to be nightly builds as well, but we changed our CI system recently and I can't find them at the moment. You might also find my terminal emulator for the CE helpful.
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TI-84 CE+ vs the Python Edition
If you're wondering why they put an ARM microcontroller in there to run Python, the answer is that the TI-84 Plus CE uses an eZ80 CPU core because it made transitioning their existing TI-84 Plus code a lot easier. The downside is that they don't have access to a C compiler than can compile Python (but we've written one), so they hacked in a microcontroller to run MicroPython.
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Help buying calculator.
The TI-84 Plus CE doesn't have anywhere near the library that the TI-83/84 Plus has, but our community SDK supports all the features of C and C++ that clang does (no STL support). Development has largely shifted to the CE. As someone who's written a fair amount of Z80 assembly, I can tell you that C is amazing.
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Make games on Ti84PlusCE
Check out the community toolchain and its documentation.
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ASM Development
If you want to learn assembly you can either do it standalone using this tutorial or as part of the C toolchain.
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ti84 calculator vs arduino vs raspberry pi
It seems you can write C/C++ programs for the Ti-84 with this. (In theory you can write / run C/C++ programs on anything which can run Turing-complete programming language.)
What are some alternatives?
quich - Just an advanced terminal calculator.
Ndless - The TI-Nspire calculator extension for native applications
bcal - :1234: Bits, bytes and address calculator
SymPy - A computer algebra system written in pure Python
programmer-calculator - Terminal calculator made for programmers working with multiple number representations, sizes, and overall close to the bits
calculator - Programs for the TI-84 Plus CE graphing calculator
calc - C-style arbitrary precision calculator
rofi-calc - 🖩 Do live calculations in rofi!
AdventOfCodeTI83 - As many Advent of Code problems as possible, done in Z80 assembly language for the TI83 graphing calculator.
Calc2KeyCE - This is a C# program that reads usb input from a TI-84 Plus CE calculator and allows the user to bind calculator keys to keyboard keys or mouse actions. It can also cast your screen to your calculator's screen.
calc - Calculator that suffers from floating point precision
CEleste - Celeste Classic port for the TI-84+CE graphing calculator