It is not appropriate to blame the Editor software for your too small monitor when you really know you need more screen real estate. For comfort, then it is senseful to use a large enough monitor so that your design canvas, tool panes, menus, and event panes fit for your designing comfort. However, if one is designing for 1024×600 or 600×1024 resolutions, then it would stand to good reason not to expect best ease from using an 800×600 monitor resolution. When designing for a 320×240 or 240×320 model then a standard monitor size is probably sufficient.
When needed, download and install the x86. Note: Installations on other Operating Systems may have been accomplished successfully, but is not officially supported and beyond the scope of any manual. Windows OS support is beyond the scope of Nextion. Users must know and be able to use their Windows OS. * Windows Operating System (XP or higher).Where an item within the guide may be specific to a particular Nextion series, the following icons will be used to represent the series: For the Basic T Series, for the Discovery F Series, for the Enhanced K Series and for the Intelligent P Series Requirements This Editor Guide will refer exclusively to the new and current Nextion Editor and not the LTS Edition. The LTS Edition will unfortunately not have any of the new bells and whistles of the new Nextion Editor.
Should complete code compatibility be of any major concern, then the Nextion Editor LTS Edition (based on v0.53) should be used instead to retain your code compatibility.
With the new, then there are indeed new behaviours and new possibilities.
Legacy Nextion devices (and safely those with firmware before v0.38) will need an Intermediary upgrade (v0.42 TFTs supplied in FAQs) applied to the legacy device BEFORE upgrading to the LTS Edition or v0.58 and later Nextion Editors (please see the FAQs here).
As such, the new Nextion Editor is not expected to retain every previous behaviour exactly. Note: Nextion Editor has undergone an extensive overhaul in support of the new Intelligent Series (similarly with v0.33 when the Enhanced Series was introduced), including additional features incorporated. So while we won’t be covering basics such as opening a file, we will point out somethings that might prove helpful to know, or reminders need be made. As such the GUI can be created within Hours instead of Weeks, and Days instead of Months. The Nextion Editor is used to rapidly create Human Machine Interface GUIs for Nextion HMI devices. This document goes through various features of the current Nextion Editor. Most new laptops will have this, or it may be possible to upgrade the memory.Nextion Editor Guide Nextion Editor ico Introduction Whatever the OS, the computer must have at least 8 GB of RAM. The tools do not run on Apple Mac computers. Either Linux OS could be run as a virtual machine under Windows 8 or 10. You must have access to computer resources to run the development tools, a PC running either Windows 7, 8, or 10 or a recent Linux OS which must be RHEL 6.5 or CentOS Linux 6.5 or later.
If you are thinking of a career in Electronics Design or an engineer looking at a career change, this is a great course to enhance your career opportunities. You use FPGA development tools to complete several example designs, including a custom processor.
You will learn what an FPGA is and how this technology was developed, how to select the best FPGA architecture for a given application, how to use state of the art software tools for FPGA development, and solve critical digital design problems using FPGAs. This course will give you the foundation for FPGA design in Embedded Systems along with practical design skills. In particular, high performance systems are now almost always implemented with FPGAs. By integrating soft-core or hardcore processors, these devices have become complete systems on a chip, steadily displacing general purpose processors and ASICs. Programmable Logic has become more and more common as a core technology used to build electronic systems. This course can also be taken for academic credit as ECEA 5360, part of CU Boulder’s Master of Science in Electrical Engineering degree.