What is z88dk?
z88dk is the only C and assembler development kit that comes ready out-of-the-box to create programs for over 100 z80-family machines.
The project was started in 1998/9 to allow a TCP stack for the Cambridge z88 to be easily written. In recent years significant work has been undertaken to improve the number of targets supported, enhance library features, make the toolchain easier to use and improve life for developers.
z88dk is dedicated to z80 family machines
Because we only target z80 family machines we can create optimised libraries. When you use z88dk, you automatically use a C standard library that is mostly written in assembler.
The library consists of over 15000 files containing at least 250k lines of assembler code. It's probably the largest repository of z80 assembler source code online.
z88dk is flexible
The point of any development kit should be to make life easy for you, the developer, and allow you to focus on writing your application and not on figuring out how to turn a hex file into a loadable artefact. As a result, the default setup for z88dk is configured to just make things work.
However, we know developers love twiddling knobs, after all, we're developers too. So with z88dk you can tune sizes, toggle features on and off, choose different floating point libraries, switch library implementations, override library implementations, bypass crts, turn off using the standard library.
And yes, you can even generate hex files should you wish!
z88dk is easy to use
Assuming you want to compile for a supported target, and with over 100 targets to choose from, the chances are you are! Then it's easy to produce an "executable" with z88dk, it's just a single command. Let's create a .TAP file for use with ZX Spectrum emulators:
zcc +zx program.c -create-app
How about a bootable +3 Spectrum disc?
zcc +zx program.c -create-app -subtype=plus3
Need it for CP/M instead? Try this:
zcc +cpm program.c -create-app
And a .com
file is created. Do you want to test the .com
file using
z80pack? It's much easier to test with a disc image, so let us create one:
zcc +cpm program.c -create-app -subtype=z80pack
Oh, it's an 8080 CP/M machine you're targetting, of course:
zcc +cpm -clib=8080 program.c -create-app -subtype=z80pack
An 8080 CP/M machine with a Polymorphic VTI graphics card?
zcc +cpm -clib=8080 program.c -create-app -subtype=z80pack --vti
z88dk is the easiest way to use sdcc for z80
Seriously it really is, lets do it:
zcc +cpm program.c -create-app -subtype=z80pack -compiler=sdcc
Easy as that, no messing around with crt files, linker scripts, hex2bin, cpmtools etc, just one command producing a disk image containing a binary compiled with sdcc.