71 lines
3.1 KiB
Plaintext
71 lines
3.1 KiB
Plaintext
/**
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@page STemWin_Simulation Readme file
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@verbatim
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******************************************************************************
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* @file readme.txt
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* @author MCD Application Team
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* @brief Description of the STemWin Simulation project.
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******************************************************************************
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* @attention
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*
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* Copyright (c) 2016 STMicroelectronics.
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* All rights reserved.
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*
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* This software is licensed under terms that can be found in the LICENSE file
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* in the root directory of this software component.
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* If no LICENSE file comes with this software, it is provided AS-IS.
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*
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******************************************************************************
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@endverbatim
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@par Description
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Compile the same C source on your Windows PC using a native (typically Microsoft)
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compiler and create an executable for your own application.
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Doing so allows the following:
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- Design of the user interface on your PC (no hardware required!).
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- Debugging of the user interface program.
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- Creation of demos of your application in windows executable file .
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The STemWin simulation requires Microsoft Visual C++ (version 6.00 or higher) and the
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integrated development environment (IDE) which comes with it. You will see a simulation
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of your LCD on your PC screen, which has the same resolution in X and Y and can display
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the exact same colors as your LCD once it has been properly configured.
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The entire graphic library API and Window Manager API of the simulation are identical
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to those on your target system; all functions will behave in the very same way as
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on the target hardware since the simulation uses the same C source code as the target
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system. The difference lies only in the lower level of the software: the display
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driver. Instead of using the actual display driver, the PC simulation uses a simulation
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driver which writes into a bitmap. The bitmap is then displayed on your screen using
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a second thread of the simulation. This second thread is invisible to the application;
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it behaves just as if the LCD routines were writing directly to the display.
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The STemWinxxx_WIN32.lib file contains a full library which allows you to evaluate all
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available features of STemWin. You will not be able to view the source code of STemWin or
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the simulation, but you will still be able to become familiar with what STemWin can do.
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The project allows also to run the different Segger samples that can be downloaded
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from here: http://www.segger.com/emwin-samples.html
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To do this, user has only to replace the file "MainTask.c" into the project workspace
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by the downloaded one.
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@par Software environment
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- This Simulation project runs on VS Express for Desktop on windows platform
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- This project has been tested with Microsoft Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows Desktop on Windows 7
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@par How to use it ?
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In order to use the simulation project :
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- Open the Simulation.vcxproj file
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- Rebuild all files
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- Start Debugging (F5)
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- A "hello world" message will be shown in the Simulation display
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- the MainTask.c could be overwritten by user code to run his own code
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*/
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