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How to use Yoctopuce Android library with Kotlin

By seb, in Android and Programming, may 17,2019.

The annual Google IO conference was held last week. During the different keynotes for Android, there was a specific focus on Kotlin, the new programming language for Android. As this language is becoming more and more popular, we decided to devote a post on it: we are going to see how to use our Android library in an Android application written in Kotlin.



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Using .NET Core on a Raspberry Pi

By seb, in Programming, april 26,2019.

A few weeks ago, in our post on .NET Core and NuGet, we promised you a post on how to use these two technologies on a Raspberry Pi. So we keep our promise and this week we look at how to write a .NET Core application under Windows and how to deploy it on a Raspberry Pi.



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Using the C# library on Linux and macOS with Mono

By seb, in Programming, february 22,2019.

We recently published two C# applications which use Yoctopuce modules: Yocto-Visualization and Yocto-Discovery. Thanks to Mono, we can run these two applications under Windows, macOS, and Linux (Intel and ARM). We needed a few trials until Mono accepted to use our library. So we thought that this would interest other users...

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Yoctopuce & NEEO, the useless driver

By martinm, in Programming and Internet of Things, february 15,2019.

For a long while, the Rolls of universal remote controls was the Pronto series, but Philips stopped manufacturing them about ten years ago. They had probably exhausted the pool of customers ready to pay one thousand dollars for a universal remote control. Today, the next generation is more or less ensured by Logitech's Harmony and NEEO. As NEEO provides an SDK, we wondered if we could use it to control Yoctopuce modules.

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Using our libraries under Linux aarch64 or arm64

By seb, in Programming, december 21,2018.

A few customers have asked us whether we supported Linux aarch64 or arm64, that is a Linux which uses an 64-bit ARM processor. The answer is yes and no. We don't provide pre-compiled binaries for these platforms, so by default our libraries don't work. But you can recompile our libraries to make them work properly. Explanations...


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