Application: Arduino
Category: Utilities
Description:
The Arduino IDE.
Features: Arduino is an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple I/O board and a development environment that implements the Processing/Wiring language. Arduino can be used to develop stand-alone interactive objects or can be connected to software on your computer (e.g. Flash, Processing and MaxMSP). The boards can be assembled by hand or purchased preassembled.
Download Arduino 1.8.19 Portable Development Test 1 [110MB download / 537MB installed]
(MD5: 57ab4ead6480b65b8aebbbdedd1731c1)
(SHA256: 932c6ad32b00f05c5494cb26462a2ceee006de4666b26ed8a4009e3cc7adfbbf)
(SHA512: 29545192bd6336dd9a0dbcab08e0fc7aa24c07582e206f88921c653689e6ef138bad869655e084f974566c60874ad69141f4f02046dc1c786864a6240132c662)
Update base app.
Update base app. Update link in libraries instructions. Lossless compression of image files (.gif, .jpg, .png, etc)
What about version 2?
I'd like to see the currently latest Arduino IDE 2.1.1 in portableapps format.
it's what i've been working on for the past few days.
https://portableapps.com/node/68844
I'd like to use the
Java
inCommonFiles
folder instead.Symbolic link with
mklink /d
is effective and non-official but only works on NTFS.Do you have better ways?
According to https://forum.arduino.cc/t/forcing-java-64-bit-with-arduino/1076759/5
It seems that the Java path is hard-coded.
This one is a little over my head. Need to learn some stuff before I can weigh in. New with java.
The
Data
folder seems to have no purpose.The real data is in the
portable
folder instead.There won't be any update to the main app, so it's trivial.
But this seems weird to me.