Intel Assembly programming in Visual c++ .net 2003 Standard possible?
Purchase of MSDN for 1200 is the better bet than the whole Ent,Pro thing. As you can install upto 10 of each OS that comes with it, 2K or 2K3. SQL and tons of other stuff.
Drakkon:
I've downloaded free compilers before, Dev c++ included, and the only one that worked for me without much troubles was the borland compiler. But even with the borland compiler there are limitations as to what you can do. Window and Menu design is just one major minus. The other one is of course, no assembler included or available.
Anonymous:
Right now all I can afford is the Standard (the cheapest) Edition. I'm not too worried about major optimizations right now. Just want something to compile the source from the books that I have now and the source from future books that I plan to purchase. I'm in a beginner learning stage (with the c++ language, know 32-bit assembly fairly well though!) and just was curious if you could include assembly in the source itself without linking in an object file or dll.
Mezz:
In the Provantage catalogue, the Standard c++ edition is only $90 (my price range!). Then all I see is the visual studio editions, the pro costs $467 and the enterprise costs $942. And I just noticed that these prices are for the Upgrade versions only. And because I'm not in college, I will be paying FULL price! Hey, anybody know any better deals than this?
Mateo
[edited by - mateo on April 13, 2004 5:20:39 PM]
I've downloaded free compilers before, Dev c++ included, and the only one that worked for me without much troubles was the borland compiler. But even with the borland compiler there are limitations as to what you can do. Window and Menu design is just one major minus. The other one is of course, no assembler included or available.
Anonymous:
Right now all I can afford is the Standard (the cheapest) Edition. I'm not too worried about major optimizations right now. Just want something to compile the source from the books that I have now and the source from future books that I plan to purchase. I'm in a beginner learning stage (with the c++ language, know 32-bit assembly fairly well though!) and just was curious if you could include assembly in the source itself without linking in an object file or dll.
Mezz:
In the Provantage catalogue, the Standard c++ edition is only $90 (my price range!). Then all I see is the visual studio editions, the pro costs $467 and the enterprise costs $942. And I just noticed that these prices are for the Upgrade versions only. And because I'm not in college, I will be paying FULL price! Hey, anybody know any better deals than this?
Mateo
[edited by - mateo on April 13, 2004 5:20:39 PM]
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