![]() In fact it borrowed many ideas from these and other common Windows programs. He圎dit was always designed to be simple to use and familiar to users of Windows software such as MS Word and Visual Studio. I wrote He圎dit in 1997-1998 as it was something I needed in my work and the hex editors available at the time were poor. You can use the program or any of the source code for whatever purpose you see fit as long as you abide by the relatively unrestrictive license requirements (see below) or any specific requirements for any of the included 3rd party code. Only need Visual Studio, plus some open source code and libraries (most of which came from right here on CodeProject). So now He圎dit 4.0 is open source once more (seeĪ shareware version available for those who want to pay for it (see (The BCG library is an excellent MFC extension library so I do not regret using it.) Luckily, a few years ago Microsoft bought the BCG code and incorporated it into MFC. Was little point in making He圎dit 2.0 open source since it used the commercial BCG library. Were shareware (though I have always maintained a free version). The first version of He圎dit (1999) was open source but later versions ![]() There is now also a project file for VS2012 It should be easy enough to build but see the He圎dit is written in C++ and this version requires the new MFC provided Not been in too much of a hurry to release it.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
December 2022
Categories |