--- In "charliem_1216" <>
wrote:
>
> Hi --
>
> --- In "victorp_27" <victorp_27@> wrote:
> >
> > Hi everyone. I want to use some matlab functions(like hilbert
> > transform) in my c code, so I can later cross compile them using
> arm-
> > linux-gcc in cygwin and the i can use them in my TS. Does
anybody
> know
> > how I can do this or something similar?. thanks
> >
>
> I see a couple big problems:
>
> * Matlab is commercial i386 only, AFAIK, without an ARM version
> * Floating Point with EP9302 is very slow.
>
> The way around the first issue is to write your C code using a
> scientific subroutine package that's available in source code.
You
> can then compile these libs yourself for ARM, and use them instead
> of Matlab. Something like the gnu Scientific Library package
> (http://www.gnu.org/software/gsl) or something at netlib
> (http://www.netlib.org).
>
> Floating point on the TS ARM boards can be improved, but not
easily,
> and this may be your biggest problem.
>
> If you decide to stick to linux on x86 architecture, Octave is a
> mostly Matlab compatable linux program that could make it easier
for
> you to move to linux. http://www.octave.org
>
> Regards, ...... Charlie
>
Thank you for your answer Charlie. I've already install octave in
cygwin, but I don´t how to use the functions (the .m files) so I can
compile with the arm-linux-gcc. Could somebody give me a clue about
how to do this?
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