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So we made a decision to buy the dev kit, but then what? ( mac)

FormerMember
FormerMember

I am spending the last 3 days trying to make sure somebody on this plant made it using a mac. Write a simple program and flash it to the DK. (before we make our own pcb)

I was able to find multiple questions about mac, without a single clear answer how exactly you do that. I find only promotions to this Segger software (that looks like something from 1980)

There was 1 guy who made it using command line, and his way seems like hell.

Do you have an official guide to somebody who pay for your product using a mac ?

  1. Where do I write my code? the actual code that I can compile for the chip ? can I use Xcode?
  2. I have the DK board, how do I flash it ?

Nordic, there are tens of millions mac users in this world, they really want to use your chip, but I found that all of them chose to give up because there is no clear way to do that.

Parents
  • no they all didn't give up. I've been programming Nordic and other embedded stuff on a mac for the last 4 years and I wouldn't use one of the old trashy windows embedded IDEs if you paid me. You think SES looks like something from the 80s? Go look at Keil which is something from the 60s and which many companies support as the only solution for programming. Nordic at least supports gcc, and all their recent python-based tools are cross platform.

    I use Crossworks, which is the product Rowley whiteboxed for Segger. I love it, for embedded development it does exactly what you need and it supports just about every device I've bought so far. And I think when they did the SES port they made it even nicer and cleaner.

    Once you've done some embedded programming with Nordic and then looked at the offerings from other companies, you'll find Nordic is way ahead of the curve.

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  • no they all didn't give up. I've been programming Nordic and other embedded stuff on a mac for the last 4 years and I wouldn't use one of the old trashy windows embedded IDEs if you paid me. You think SES looks like something from the 80s? Go look at Keil which is something from the 60s and which many companies support as the only solution for programming. Nordic at least supports gcc, and all their recent python-based tools are cross platform.

    I use Crossworks, which is the product Rowley whiteboxed for Segger. I love it, for embedded development it does exactly what you need and it supports just about every device I've bought so far. And I think when they did the SES port they made it even nicer and cleaner.

    Once you've done some embedded programming with Nordic and then looked at the offerings from other companies, you'll find Nordic is way ahead of the curve.

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