From: michael carey on
Well I have been spurred on by the introduction of the new 50G, does anybody
have any good suggestions for good C programs that I might consider? My
background is electronics engineering.
Cheers Mick Carey
mickpc(a)bigpond.com


From: Claudio Lapilli on
Hi,

michael carey wrote:
> Well I have been spurred on by the introduction of the new 50G, does anybody
> have any good suggestions for good C programs that I might consider? My
> background is electronics engineering.
> Cheers Mick Carey
> mickpc(a)bigpond.com

Search hpcalc.org for hpgcc and you'll find as many as TWO!!! (QuineHP
and Utilsgcc)

***
NOTE: It would be nice if people uploading files written in hpgcc to
hpcalc.org include the text hpgcc in the description, to make the
search easier for other people looking for C sources to learn C.
***

I know Steen has been working on a C module for his libraries as well
(hybrid hpgcc/sysrpl), and there's Tim's SDFiler which is also a hybrid
hpgcc/sysrpl.
There is also an excellent Mandelbrot fractal viewer in grayscale
(Mandelzoom in hpcalc.org - well worth a look), and a Sodoku solver.
Also, you'll find some very old little programs by Al Borowski (for
very early version of hpgcc, source code will probably need some
adjustments to compile with hpgcc2.0), like Piano and Fast Fibonacci.
I didn't forget your own triangle solver, but I guess you are not
interested in that one.

And of course, all the examples and demos included with hpgcc.

But the fun is not in finding programs written by somebody else, is in
writing your own!
Regards,
Claudio

From: Michael on
Claudio Lapilli wrote:
> Hi,
>
> michael carey wrote:
>
>>Well I have been spurred on by the introduction of the new 50G, does anybody
>>have any good suggestions for good C programs that I might consider? My
>>background is electronics engineering.
>>Cheers Mick Carey
>>mickpc(a)bigpond.com
>
>
> Search hpcalc.org for hpgcc and you'll find as many as TWO!!! (QuineHP
> and Utilsgcc)
>
> ***
> NOTE: It would be nice if people uploading files written in hpgcc to
> hpcalc.org include the text hpgcc in the description, to make the
> search easier for other people looking for C sources to learn C.
> ***
>
> I know Steen has been working on a C module for his libraries as well
> (hybrid hpgcc/sysrpl), and there's Tim's SDFiler which is also a hybrid
> hpgcc/sysrpl.
> There is also an excellent Mandelbrot fractal viewer in grayscale
> (Mandelzoom in hpcalc.org - well worth a look), and a Sodoku solver.
> Also, you'll find some very old little programs by Al Borowski (for
> very early version of hpgcc, source code will probably need some
> adjustments to compile with hpgcc2.0), like Piano and Fast Fibonacci.
> I didn't forget your own triangle solver, but I guess you are not
> interested in that one.
>
> And of course, all the examples and demos included with hpgcc.
>
> But the fun is not in finding programs written by somebody else, is in
> writing your own!
> Regards,
> Claudio
>
Yes I forgot about that, do u think its worth spruicing up?
Mick
From: Michael on
michael carey wrote:
> Well I have been spurred on by the introduction of the new 50G, does anybody
> have any good suggestions for good C programs that I might consider? My
> background is electronics engineering.
> Cheers Mick Carey
> mickpc(a)bigpond.com
>
>
Big mistake, I was not clear in my heading. I was after suggestions for
new programs that I might consider writing. DUH!
If anybody has suggestions please.
Cheers Mick
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