OK, then I will not find out something that has already been invented :-) Tamas On 17/08/06, Tony Smith wrote: > > > Well, there are lots of flow chart generators -- maybe not > > for PIC programming , but there are some very expensive > > softwares that do that. But all of them are converting a > > program listing to a flow chart or generates program listings > > from that. Which I meant is a 'native' flowchart, so that > > when you would say 'BCF GPIO,5' you would put the relevant > > function box or whatever instead like: > > > The www.picaxe.com software is what you describe, as was the IBM system. > Screenshot on their website - > http://www.rev-ed.co.uk/picaxe/images/editorbig.jpg - looks like your > ASCII > one :) > > For PicAxe, the commands are at the lowest level, so each box is a single > command. The IBM software could have subroutines, double clicking that > box > brought up its flowchart. > > You don't get assembly, the program gets converted to tokens & downloaded > (RS232) to the chip. Naturally, it runs a lot slower than a compiled > Basic > or native assembler. The editor is a 26 meg download. > > The PicAxe is a PIC chip, either an 8-pin (16F629A), 18-pin (16F628A) or > 28-pin (can't remember). > > Tony > > -- > http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive > View/change your membership options at > http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist > -- unPIC -- The PIC Disassembler http://unpic.sourceforge.net -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist