Mar 1, 2010 #1 esorato Electrical Mar 1, 2010 4 BR Hi everyone, Does anyone knows why the native mex compiler isn't installed when installing the matlab in windows vista (64 bits) ? I'm intending to use the R2009b on windows vista but I couldn't manage to install the native mex compiler (lcc). Thanks a lot
Hi everyone, Does anyone knows why the native mex compiler isn't installed when installing the matlab in windows vista (64 bits) ? I'm intending to use the R2009b on windows vista but I couldn't manage to install the native mex compiler (lcc). Thanks a lot
Mar 1, 2010 1 #2 SomptingGuy Automotive May 25, 2005 8,922 GB This fairly recent thread discusses the lack of 64-bit LCC. http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/newsreader/view_thread/249136 The conclusion seemed to be that there is a 64-bit version, but The MathWorks choose not to supply it. Of course the other common issue with using LCC is that it is "only" a C compiler, not a C++ compiler. This trips many people up. - Steve Upvote 0 Downvote
This fairly recent thread discusses the lack of 64-bit LCC. http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/newsreader/view_thread/249136 The conclusion seemed to be that there is a 64-bit version, but The MathWorks choose not to supply it. Of course the other common issue with using LCC is that it is "only" a C compiler, not a C++ compiler. This trips many people up. - Steve
Mar 1, 2010 Thread starter #3 esorato Electrical Mar 1, 2010 4 BR Thanks Steve. It helped a lot. Do you know if is there any way to execute a user defined matlab function from simulink without compiling it ? I mean, execute it in matlab workspace whole executing a model from simulink. Best regards Edson Upvote 0 Downvote
Thanks Steve. It helped a lot. Do you know if is there any way to execute a user defined matlab function from simulink without compiling it ? I mean, execute it in matlab workspace whole executing a model from simulink. Best regards Edson
Mar 2, 2010 #4 SomptingGuy Automotive May 25, 2005 8,922 GB If your function is in C, no. If it simply a Matlab m-file, you can access it via an s-function block. - Steve Upvote 0 Downvote
If your function is in C, no. If it simply a Matlab m-file, you can access it via an s-function block. - Steve
Mar 2, 2010 Thread starter #5 esorato Electrical Mar 1, 2010 4 BR Very nice Steve. Thank you very much and sorry by the beginner questions. Edson Upvote 0 Downvote