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CodeView is a standalone debugger created by David Norris at Microsoft in 1985 as part of its development toolset. [1] It originally shipped with Microsoft C 4.0 and later. It also shipped with Visual Basic for MS-DOS, Microsoft BASIC PDS, and a number of other Microsoft language products. [2]
cscope is a programming tool which works in console mode, text-based interface, that allows computer programmers or software developers to search source code of the programming language C, with some support for C++ and Java.
These are the Flowchart view, the Blocks view (a graphical programming paradigm inspired by Blockly), the C code view and the Pseudocode view. There is also a fifth state machine way of entering code. Flowcode also has a mode named App Developer which is capable of creating Windows based applications via a runtime executable.
HxD is a freeware hex editor, disk editor, and memory editor developed by Maël Hörz for Windows.It can open files larger than 4 GiB and open and edit the raw contents of disk drives, as well as display and edit the memory used by running processes.
A software analysis and testing tool suite, that performs static analysis, standards enforcement (eg. MISRA C/C++), dynamic analysis, unit testing and requirements traceability. Lint: 1978-07-26 Yes; permissive BSD-like [10] — C — — — — — The original, from 1978, static code analyzer for C. MALPAS: No; proprietary Ada C — — — —
Any programming language (proven for C, C++, Java, C#, PHP, COBOL) gSOAP: C / C++ WSDL specifications C / C++ code that can be used to communicate with WebServices. XML with the definitions obtained. Microsoft Visual Studio LightSwitch: C# / VB.NET Active Tier Database schema: Complete Silverlight application (Desktop or Web) Pro*C: Inline SQL ...
Dev-C++ is a free full-featured integrated development environment (IDE) distributed under the GNU General Public License for programming in C and C++. It was originally developed by Colin Laplace and was first released in 1998. It is written in Delphi. It is bundled with, and uses, the MinGW or TDM-GCC 64bit port of the GCC as its compiler.
Although Microsoft Help Viewer was referred to as MS Help 3.x during development, it is a wholly new product and technically unrelated to Microsoft Help 2. With the growing need for a general Unicode-based help system, has become the default help system for Windows 10.