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Global Moderator H/PC Guru Posts: | 7,188 |
Location: | USA | Status: | |
| I'm confused. I see on eBay many listings for Microsoft Windows CE Toolkit for Visual Basic.
How is this different from the free download from Microsoft for their Handheld PC 2000 SDK?
Rich | |
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H/PC Sensei Posts: | 1,330 |
Location: | North of England | Status: | |
| One is a toolkit for visual basic, the other is Embedded Visual Basic which is part of Embedded Visual Tools, which is free.
EVB requires CE 2.11 or higher IIRC, and also requires an interpreter to be present on the HPC asit compiles to a byte-code style interpreted language. It's a standalone product.
The toolkit is an add on for VB6. I *think* it targets the same machines and has the same limitations of compiling to an interpreted language, but really couldn't swear to it...
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Global Moderator H/PC Guru Posts: | 7,188 |
Location: | USA | Status: | |
| Thanks for the answer...especially since I had no idea what they were...
Rich | |
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Administrator H/PC Oracle Posts: | 18,011 |
Location: | United Kingdom | Status: | |
| There are two, well, five Toolkits
Windows CE Toolkit for Visual Basic 5.0
Windows CE Toolkit for Visual C++ 5.0
Windows CE Toolkit for Visual J++ (was withdrawn)
Windows CE Toolkit for Visual Basic 6.0
Windows CE Toolkit for Visual C++ 6.0
You need the 5.0 C++ version to program for CE 1.00
All they are essentially bolt-on API, runtimes, documentation and sample components for the Microsoft Windows developer studio Visual Studio - specifically VC++ and VB. Without these, VS can only work with x86 Win32 code. They are slightly more advanced, VB is still byte-code, however they are the professional products for CE development. eVT is the free small task and home user development studio - at least that was the aim. | |
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