Difference between revisions of "ASCII Tools"

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<big>ASCII Tools </big>
 
<big>ASCII Tools </big>
  
ASCII Tools was initially created in 1988 by KSL and developped until the end of 2004. Its virgin name was CPCWRITE. For many years, CPCWRITE was left unfinished. In 2004, the grow of interest for the CPC machines in the internet pushed the development of ASCII Tools. The main task was to create a set of tools to deal with big source code files like C, Fortran, Turbo Pascal, transferred from Windows or MS-DOS Systems to Amstrad machines. In 2004, ASCII Tools v.1  was presented at the [[COM II|CPC Meeting II]] organized by [[TFM]]
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ASCII Tools was initially created in 1988 by [[KSL|KSL]] and developped until the end of 2004. Its virgin name was CPCWRITE. For many years, CPCWRITE was left unfinished. In 2004, the grow of interest for the CPC machines in the internet pushed the development of ASCII Tools. The main task was to create a set of tools to deal with big source code files like C, Fortran, Turbo Pascal, transferred from Windows or MS-DOS Systems to Amstrad machines. In 2004, ASCII Tools v.1  was presented at the [[COM II|CPC Meeting II]] organized by [[TFM]]
  
 
'''Nowadays (2020), ASCII Tools have been further developed and included in the latest version of COSMOS (v.25/2020) which can be downloaded directly from CPCWiki.''' <br><br>.
 
'''Nowadays (2020), ASCII Tools have been further developed and included in the latest version of COSMOS (v.25/2020) which can be downloaded directly from CPCWiki.''' <br><br>.

Revision as of 12:59, 16 August 2020

ASCII Tools

ASCII Tools was initially created in 1988 by KSL and developped until the end of 2004. Its virgin name was CPCWRITE. For many years, CPCWRITE was left unfinished. In 2004, the grow of interest for the CPC machines in the internet pushed the development of ASCII Tools. The main task was to create a set of tools to deal with big source code files like C, Fortran, Turbo Pascal, transferred from Windows or MS-DOS Systems to Amstrad machines. In 2004, ASCII Tools v.1 was presented at the CPC Meeting II organized by TFM

Nowadays (2020), ASCII Tools have been further developed and included in the latest version of COSMOS (v.25/2020) which can be downloaded directly from CPCWiki.

.