Difference between revisions of "Compilers"
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== z80 == | == z80 == | ||
− | * '''SDCC''' is an open source C compiler for microcontrollers. It can output z80 assembly. However | + | * '''SDCC''' is an open source C compiler for microcontrollers. It can output z80 assembly. However, the code is bloated and inefficient. |
− | * '''z88dk''' is a derivative of | + | * '''z88dk''' is a derivative of the Small-C compiler. It is targeted specifically at the z80 line of processors and even has dedicated TI file format outputs. The code is very bloated and can be less efficient than SDCC. |
− | * The '''HI-TECH Z80 C Compiler''' is a very old and unsupported compiler by HI-TECH that produces much better-quality code than the two compilers mentioned above. However, HI-TECH has discontinued this compiler and it is very difficult to obtain a copy. Furthermore, it is a commercial, not open-source, compiler, so using it without a license is of questionable legality. | + | * The '''HI-TECH Z80 C Compiler''' is a very old and unsupported compiler by HI-TECH that produces much better-quality code than the two compilers mentioned above (Although recent SDCC versions are able to generate code comparable to the HI-TECH C compiler). However, HI-TECH has discontinued this compiler and it is very difficult to obtain a copy. Furthermore, it is a commercial, not open-source, compiler, so using it without a license is of questionable legality. |
== 68k == | == 68k == | ||
− | * '''TIGCC''' is the original C compiler for 68k calculators. It is a patched version of the GNU Compiler Collection, and only supports C. | + | * '''TIGCC''' is the original C compiler for 68k calculators. It is a patched version of the GNU Compiler Collection, and only supports C and 68000 assembly. |
− | * '''GCC4TI''' is a | + | * '''GCC4TI''' is a fork of TIGCC, first published in 2009. Work on GCC4TI includes: |
+ | ** fixing a number of bugs; | ||
+ | ** performing optimizations in the library; | ||
+ | ** integrating 2002-2005 unprocessed contributions to TIGCC: dozens of "new" functions; | ||
+ | ** improving the build system: | ||
+ | *** portability: in 2009, the GCC4TI build scripts were made to build out of the box on MacOS X, FreeBSD, OpenSolaris; | ||
+ | *** reliability: GCC4TI's build scripts abort the build upon the first error instead of silently leaving users with broken builds; | ||
+ | *** support for cross-compilation of Windows binaries from under Linux; | ||
+ | *** increased automation; | ||
+ | ** adding better ISO C99 compatibility; | ||
+ | ** integrating the TI-68k Developer Utilities (formerly "TIGCC Tools Suite"), originating from TICT, as an integral part of the toolchain. |
Latest revision as of 11:11, 25 April 2015
z80
- SDCC is an open source C compiler for microcontrollers. It can output z80 assembly. However, the code is bloated and inefficient.
- z88dk is a derivative of the Small-C compiler. It is targeted specifically at the z80 line of processors and even has dedicated TI file format outputs. The code is very bloated and can be less efficient than SDCC.
- The HI-TECH Z80 C Compiler is a very old and unsupported compiler by HI-TECH that produces much better-quality code than the two compilers mentioned above (Although recent SDCC versions are able to generate code comparable to the HI-TECH C compiler). However, HI-TECH has discontinued this compiler and it is very difficult to obtain a copy. Furthermore, it is a commercial, not open-source, compiler, so using it without a license is of questionable legality.
68k
- TIGCC is the original C compiler for 68k calculators. It is a patched version of the GNU Compiler Collection, and only supports C and 68000 assembly.
- GCC4TI is a fork of TIGCC, first published in 2009. Work on GCC4TI includes:
- fixing a number of bugs;
- performing optimizations in the library;
- integrating 2002-2005 unprocessed contributions to TIGCC: dozens of "new" functions;
- improving the build system:
- portability: in 2009, the GCC4TI build scripts were made to build out of the box on MacOS X, FreeBSD, OpenSolaris;
- reliability: GCC4TI's build scripts abort the build upon the first error instead of silently leaving users with broken builds;
- support for cross-compilation of Windows binaries from under Linux;
- increased automation;
- adding better ISO C99 compatibility;
- integrating the TI-68k Developer Utilities (formerly "TIGCC Tools Suite"), originating from TICT, as an integral part of the toolchain.