You can safely ignore this forever and it doesn't cost you any functionality to use it for free, but just be aware of this (and if you can support the developers.). ST is paid software available on a trial basis, and will keep asking you to buy it every few times you save. Other editors might let you do something like this please feel free to check them out. (Ok, I'm basically endorsing this one text editor, but ever since a friend of mine showed it to me, I've found it to be my preferred editor in most circumstances. Use Sublime Text 3 ( ) along with the Sublime SFTP plugin (sorry, you'll have to search for this) I've found it fairly acceptable, and it's a GUI so you can just drag and drop files/folders between your local Windows machine, and the remote Ubuntu Linux machine. WinSCP is just a GUI which works similarly to PuTTY, but you can browse files on the remote server. Also, warning: I am not a Windows user, I just provide support for them when they need to work with Unix :). I'll describe two methods, and you decide what you like best. I've had to deal with this a lot, and I used to teach a few classes where students needed to work from Windows machines. At some point, the compiler will refuse to compile something, or your Windows editor won't recognize a single newline character as end-of-line. Second, you're going to have problems with end-of-line bytes moving the file back-and-forth between Windows and Linux. First, there's an amazing range of editors of various types available, from NotePad imitators to full-blown IDEs. Honestly, you'd be better off doing text editing on the Ubuntu machine. For that matter, you may need to start sshd on your Ubuntu box. You have to "pull" the file from your Linux machine, because Microsoft artificially makes computers into "servers" and "clients" (presumably to create false high price points for corporate buyers) and doesn't see fit to put a SSH server on anything. ![]() On the Ubuntu machine, compile and test. ![]() On the Windows machine: pscp test.c odroid:test/ You'll probably have to type in your Ubuntu password.On the Windows machine, change directory to C:\Users\MyUser\Downloads.I'm not a Windows person at all so all I can tell you is put pscp.exe in your %path%. ![]() You're doing this the very hardest way, but here you go:
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