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as seen on Oracle Blogs
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If you have been following Java news, you are already aware of the fact that there has been a lot of investment in Java for ARM-based devices and servers over the last couple of years (news, more news, even more, and lots more). We have released Java ME Embedded binaries for ARM Cortex-M micro controllers…
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as seen on Oracle Blogs
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Over the years, Oracle has been making big investments in Java for ARM-based devices.
This week, Oracle and ARM announced further expanding their collaboration on a number of fronts, from additional hardware platforms, porting layers, and optimized communication protocols, to 64-bit ARMv8 support…
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as seen on Stack Overflow
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Hi all.
I've been receiving this warning since I loaded my project in last Xcode 4 preview. There was no warning before that but now I can't get rid of it even in Xcode 3.2. I've been googling but nobody seems to have the same error.
My project and target settings are correct (IMHO): Architectures:…
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as seen on Super User
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I am building a program on a TS-7800(SBC), and when I run make (show below), it appears to go through all of the steps normally, but in the end i do not get a binary file. Why is this, and how can I get my file.
makefile
CC= /home/eclipse/ReidTest/cc/cross-toolchains/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/bin/arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc…
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as seen on Stack Overflow
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I want to know how objective C runtime handle arguments when I call a objective C method like
[NSString stringWithFomat:@"%@, %@", @"Hello", @"World"]
There are three arguments for this objective C call, how does it work compared to typical way on a ARM system. I have known register r0, r1, r2…
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