Embedded Motion Control/Tutorials 2015: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
# [[ Embedded Motion Control/Tutorials/Setting up an IDE | Setting up an IDE ]] | # [[ Embedded Motion Control/Tutorials/Setting up an IDE | Setting up an IDE ]] | ||
# [[ Embedded_Motion_Control/Tutorials/Setting_up_the_PICO_simulator_2015 | Setting up the PICO simulator ]] | # [[ Embedded_Motion_Control/Tutorials/Setting_up_the_PICO_simulator_2015 | Setting up the PICO simulator ]] | ||
# [[ Embedded_Motion_Control/Tutorials/Towards an autonomous robot | Towards an autonomous robot ]] | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
# .. More tutorials coming up ..! | # .. More tutorials coming up ..! | ||
Revision as of 23:18, 29 April 2015
- Introduction
- Installing Ubuntu
- Customizing Ubuntu
- Do the following C++ tutorials:
- cplusplus.com: up to and including Name visibility
- MIT's Introduction to C++: up to and including Classes
- Remarks:
- For now, use a simple editor such as gedit (the ubuntu version of Notepad). We will install a more advanced editor (IDE - Integrated Development Environment) later.
- Once you have saved your C++ program (e.g. as example.cpp), it can be compiled from a terminal using:
g++ example.cpp -o example
and run with./example