I downloaded the free app but it is stuck in 'Application not responding'
Arduino says and I agree, in general, the const keyword is preferred for defining constants and should be used instead of #define
"Never wrestle with a pig....the pig loves it and you end up covered in mud..." anon
My experience hours are >75,000 and I stopped counting in 2004.
Major Languages - 360 Macro Assembler, Intel Assembler, PLI/1, Pascal, C plus numerous job control and scripting
I had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met.
@will Not getting that message.
Arduino says and I agree, in general, the const keyword is preferred for defining constants and should be used instead of #define
"Never wrestle with a pig....the pig loves it and you end up covered in mud..." anon
My experience hours are >75,000 and I stopped counting in 2004.
Major Languages - 360 Macro Assembler, Intel Assembler, PLI/1, Pascal, C plus numerous job control and scripting
Found out how to install rosetta2 (I thought it had to be pre-installed, lots of apps aren't converted yet) but it had an error on install. I then re-downloaded etc, no change. I will just wait for it to be fixed, lot's of other stuff to do.
Arduino says and I agree, in general, the const keyword is preferred for defining constants and should be used instead of #define
"Never wrestle with a pig....the pig loves it and you end up covered in mud..." anon
My experience hours are >75,000 and I stopped counting in 2004.
Major Languages - 360 Macro Assembler, Intel Assembler, PLI/1, Pascal, C plus numerous job control and scripting
Finally got it working. I tried installing rosetta2 a second time and this time it did NOT have an error. I then did a some combo of install/uninstall/re-download/reboot and voila it finally worked. However, I don't see that the tool is that intuitive. I now have 3 tools to play with to try to design boxes with openings. For now drill and xacto knife are easier than figuring out the code to create them on the 3D printer. I may never figure out the openings but I am ok with that.
Arduino says and I agree, in general, the const keyword is preferred for defining constants and should be used instead of #define
"Never wrestle with a pig....the pig loves it and you end up covered in mud..." anon
My experience hours are >75,000 and I stopped counting in 2004.
Major Languages - 360 Macro Assembler, Intel Assembler, PLI/1, Pascal, C plus numerous job control and scripting