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The Embedded Wizard Studio is distributed by TARA Systems GmbH or its distributors as a per-developer license. The license consists of two parts: The Embedded Wizard Studio (i.e. the IDE), to develop graphical user interfaces (GUIs) on your Windows PC, and the Embedded Wizard Platform Package, which acts as an abstraction layer to the used embedded system, graphical subsystem and (RT)OS (if any).
Flowcode is a Microsoft Windows-based development environment commercially produced by Matrix TSL for programming embedded devices based on PIC, AVR (including Arduino), ESP32, Raspberry Pi and RP2040 and ARM technologies using graphical programming styles (such as flowcharts) and imperative programming styles (through C, State Machines and Pseudocode).
Targets real-time or embedded systems and software using industry standard languages (UML, SysML, AUTOSAR, DoDAF, MODAF, UPDM, DDS), full production-quality code generation (structural, behavioral, functional), simulation, model based testing, integration with numerous real time operating systems and IDE's Rational Rose XDE: No Unknown Unknown
Java (Full Web Application including Java source, AspectJ source, XML, JSP, Spring application contexts, build tools, property files, etc.) T4: Passive T4 Template/Text File: Any text format such as XML, XAML, C# files or just plain text files. Umple: Umple, Java, Javascript, PHP Active Tier
IAR Embedded Workbench – an integrated development environment including a C/C++ compiler, the code analysis tools C-STAT and C-RUN, and the C-SPY debugger. IAR Build Tools - the command line version of IAR Embedded Workbench, tailored for Continuous Integration , available for Windows and Linux hosts.
VisSim - system simulation and optional C-code generation of electrical, process, control, bio-medical, mechanical and UML State chart systems. Vortex (software) - a complete simulation platform featuring a realtime physics engine for rigid body dynamics, an image generator, desktop tools (Editor and Player) and more. Also available as Vortex ...
Google developed Protocol Buffers for internal use and provided a code generator for multiple languages under an open-source license. The design goals for Protocol Buffers emphasized simplicity and performance. In particular, it was designed to be smaller and faster than XML. [3]
OpenEmbedded tools use these recipes to fetch and patch source code, compile and link binaries, produce binary packages (ipk, deb, rpm), and create bootable images. Historically, OpenEmbedded recipes were stored in a single repository, and the metadata was structured as what is now called "OpenEmbedded-Classic".