Source code: Difference between revisions
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**Full installation (not minimum) of "Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 7.1" (2003 version). | **Full installation (not minimum) of "Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 7.1" (2003 version). | ||
**Microsoft Xbox SDK (a.k.a. [[XDK]]) version 5778 or 5849. | **Microsoft Xbox SDK (a.k.a. [[XDK]]) version 5778 or 5849. | ||
[[category:Development]] |
Revision as of 20:10, 2 February 2007
What is Source Code?
XBMC's source code is in C/C++, Assembly & DirectX programming-language, and this source code needs to be compiled/built with then XDK before it can be used.
- Source Code is the recipe for a computer program.
- Source code is geared towards human-readibility.
- Source code is useless by itself.
- Source code needs to be interpreted and understod (compiled).
Source code is simply the human-readable version of the computer commands that make up a software program. It is the letters and symbols that software engineers (a.k.a. developers) type into their computers when they create an software-application or operating-system. For example, if a C++ programmer wrote a program to make his computer display the words, "Hello, World," the source code might look like this:
<cpp>
#include <iostream.h> void main() { cout<<"Hello, World"; }
</cpp> Although these commands are intelligible to engineers, they are useless to computers, which understand only ones and zeros. So, to make the source code into a functioning program, translation software (called a "compiler") must convert it into the binary "object code" that computers can process.
- To compile XBMC to make a Xbox excutable file you need:
- Full installation (not minimum) of "Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 7.1" (2003 version).
- Microsoft Xbox SDK (a.k.a. XDK) version 5778 or 5849.