Tim@Visual Micro wrote on Jan 29
th, 2018 at 1:24pm:
If you want help or have any questions about a specific board you should provide the information that allows people to know what version you have installed and from where and how it is downloaded
Hi.
Ok, I do apprechiate your response, and sorry for the lack of info.
The Aurix TC275 board is developed by Hitex and is NOT free, so no schematics like Arduino.
But the toolchain is free, and the Arduino libraries are free including the TriLib DSP library.
It uses Infineon memtool 4.6 to download the code into the three processor cores.
This is automaticaly setup by installation.
One can download the Aurduino libraries and installation from their forum:
http://aurduino.boards.net/board/1/general-board Manuals and how to's are documented here as well.
A new hardware is installed into the Arduino directory with a whole tree of libraries and tools.
Standard Arduino IDE can be used.
Also it's possible to step in the code using Eclipse and a special interface they have.
This is not free, but free to try.
My thinking was that VS/VM had a way to specify libraries and paths that one could enter, so the intellisense would find commands, functions, prototypes and so on.
I guess it's not that simple.
I can recommend the TC275 to anyone that needs lots of power under the hood, also true multitasking.
The built-in protocols in this chip is not bad at all.
More to read here:
https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/processor-microcontroller-development-kits/124525...