9724a0538b
After enabling line editing support on Windows console, this is no longer trivial. |
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.. | ||
msvc | ||
.gitignore | ||
init.c | ||
init.h | ||
Makefile | ||
micropython.vcxproj | ||
mpconfigport.h | ||
mpconfigport.mk | ||
README | ||
realpath.c | ||
realpath.h | ||
sleep.c | ||
windows_mphal.c | ||
windows_mphal.h |
This is experimental, community-supported Windows port of MicroPython. It is based on Unix port, and expected to remain so. The port requires additional testing, debugging, and patches. Please consider to contribute. To cross-compile under Debian/Ubuntu Linux system: sudo apt-get install mingw32 mingw32-binutils mingw32-runtime make CROSS_COMPILE=i586-mingw32msvc- To compile under Cygwin: Install following packages using cygwin's setup.exe: mingw-gcc-g++ make make CROSS_COMPILE=i686-pc-mingw32- To compile using Visual Studio 2013: Open micropython.vcxproj and build To compile using Visual Studio 2013 commandline: msbuild micropython.vcxproj To run on Linux using Wine: Default build (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=1) uses extended Windows console functions and thus should be run using "wineconsole" tool. Depending on Wine build configuration, you may also want to select curses backend which has look&feel of a standard Unix console: wineconsole --backend=curses ./micropython.exe For more info, see https://www.winehq.org/docs/wineusr-guide/cui-programs If built without line editing and history capabilities (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=0), the resulting binary can be built using standard "wine" tool.