fxconv | ||
fxg1a | ||
fxos | ||
fxsdk | ||
.gitignore | ||
configure | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
fxSDK
The fxSDK is a development kit for Casio graphing calculators of the family of the fx-9860G and fx-CG 50. It's a set of command-line compilation and project tools used to facilitate development with the gint library.
This kit is free software; you may use it for any purpose, share it, and modify it as long as you share your changes. No credit required, but please let me know!
The fxSDK is compatible with Linux and has been successfully built on Mac OS. If there are compatibility issues, I am willing to try and port stuff to your favorite operating system.
Tool description
Project management (fxsdk)
fxsdk
lets you set up projects almost instantly with a default folder
structure and a working Makefile linking against gint for both fx-9860G and
fx-CG 50. You can then use it to build and transfer your add-ins to a
calculator.
Most project parameters can be changed just by editing a text file annotated with the role and description of each option.
fxsdk
only writes files at project creation time, so you keep control over
your build system and configuration - it just helps you get started faster.
G1A file generation (fxg1a)
fxg1a
is a versatile g1a file editor that creates, edits and dumps the header
of fx-9860G add-ins files. It is used to build a g1a file out of a binary
program.
It supports PNG icons, checking the validity and checksums of the header, repairing broken headers and dumping both the application data and icon.
Data conversion (fxconv)
fxconv
is a tool that interacts specifically with gint. It converts data
files such as images and fonts into gint-specific format and embeds the result
into object files that expose a single variable.
OS disassembly and study (fxos)
fxos
is a powerful disassembler and OS fiddling tool. It knows the structure
of OS files and can extract metadata, language information and syscalls through
a simple command-line interface.
Its key feature is the production of annotated assembler listings where syscalls invocations and peripheral registers are identified and named. This makes it a lot easier to climb back abstraction levels from the code.
Build instructions
The fxSDK is platform-agnostic; a single install will cover any target platforms. There's only one noticeable dependency:
- libpng ≥ 1.6
First configure; you can specify the install folder with --prefix
, which
defaults to your local home folder. You can also enable or disable tools.
Broadly, you will need:
fxsdk
if you want to benefit from the automated project setupfxg1a
if you want to compile add-ins for fx-9860Gfxconv
if you want to compile gint or develop add-ins with itfxos
if you want to disassemble or study OS dumps
Each tool can be enabled or disabled with --enable-<tool>
and
--disable-<tool>
. For a default build you need no arguments:
% ./configure
Then make and install as usual.
% make
% make install
If you selected an install folder for which you don't have write access (which
apparently includes the default folder on Mac OS), you will need sudo
to
install.
Usage instructions
Most details are covered in the help of each individual tool, which you can get
with -h
, --help
or by invoking each tool without arguments.