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Telelogic Rhapsody (steve huntington) | ![]() |
Topic Title: Rhapsody in C++ without an IDE Topic Summary: Created On: 6-Apr-2006 22:06 Status: Read Only |
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I have a bunch of C++ code written for Solaris that I intend to port to Linux. The compiler used will be gcc. I am interested in Rhapsody because I think it will help me document/see dependencies (I also want to make the code more modular). But the first question, and it's a big one, is Rhapsody a useful tool without an IDE?
The only IDE I've seen mentioned for use with Rhapsody other than Visual C++ is something called Tornado, which appear to be a defunct product. |
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Hi Daniel
Yes, it's absolutely useful, whether your development environment provides its own IDE or not! The "Tornado" that you refer to is a (defunct) IDE for the WindRiver VxWorks RTOS. Rhapsody has an "IDE Interface" to this environment to allow application download/execution control via Tornado. This is a special case, not the most common mode of usage. At Panasonic, we've use three embedded development environments, and the integration is excellent. Instead of an "IDE interface", Rhapsody is configured to use command line tools to download/execute the modelled application. We generate code, build and download/execute on our target environments with a single click. Further, Rhapsody's own IDE is productive, and effectively adds an IDE to environments that don't have one. best regards, Simon ------------------------- Simon Morrish simon.morrish@eu.panasonic.com http://panasonic.co.uk Panasonic ideas for life |
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