Newsgroups: comp.robotics
Path: brunix!sgiblab!uhog.mit.edu!news.media.mit.edu!fredm
From: fredm@media.mit.edu (Fred Martin)
Subject: Re: ICC11 Cross Compiler Manual Wanted
Message-ID: <1994Jan19.221848.19886@news.media.mit.edu>
Sender: news@news.media.mit.edu (USENET News System)
Organization: MIT Media Laboratory
References: <CJwAws.HpJ@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca>
Date: Wed, 19 Jan 1994 22:18:48 GMT
Lines: 27

In article <CJwAws.HpJ@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca>
nowinski@sciborg.uwaterloo.ca (Andrew Nowinski) writes: 

>Is there some kind of manual that describes the C functions and that tells 
>exactly what they do, for ICC11?

The icc11 manual is a little terse; basically it assumes you already
know C.  The top-level document is user.asc (ASCII format) or user.ps
(PostScript format).  Both are contained in the icc11 distribution
(cherupakha.media.mit.edu: pub/incoming/icc11/icc11v42.zip); the
user.asc is also available in the icc11 directory.

Additionally, there are readme files for different parts of the icc11
system (i.e., the pre-processor, the assembler) in the icc11 zip file
distribution.

If you are interested in using icc11 with the Mini Board, additionally
grab the minilib.s and the minilib.readme files.  There's "getting
going" documentation in the readme file, and a discussion of how to
use the library functions at the top of the library file (minilib.s).
More or less, the icc11 library works the same as the Dunfield
library, which is documented in the Mini Board Technical Reference.

	-Fred
-- 
Fred Martin | fredm@media.mit.edu | (617) 253-5108 | 20 Ames St. Rm. E15-320
Epistemology and Learning Group, MIT Media Lab     | Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
