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Various board-specific #defines and arrays of pins added.
For the changelog (some of this information predates this commit):
* wirish/boards.h now declares the following arrays of pin numbers:
* boardPWMPins - PWM-capable pins
* boardADCPins - ADC-capable pins
* boardUsedPins - pins already in use, e.g. BOARD_BUTTON_PIN
It also declares a bool boardUsesPin(uint8 pin) function for
convenient testing of whether a pin is in use.
* wirish/boards/*.h now define:
* BOARD_USART1_TX_PIN
* BOARD_USART1_RX_PIN
* BOARD_USART2_TX_PIN
* BOARD_USART2_RX_PIN
* BOARD_USART3_TX_PIN
* BOARD_USART3_RX_PIN
* BOARD_NR_GPIO_PINS (renamed from NR_GPIO_PINS)
* BOARD_NR_USARTS (renamed from NR_USARTS)
* BOARD_NR_PWM_PINS
* BOARD_NR_ADC_PINS
* BOARD_NR_USED_PINS
* wirish/boards/maple_native.h now defines:
* BOARD_UART4_TX_PIN
* BOARD_UART4_RX_PIN
* BOARD_UART5_TX_PIN
* BOARD_UART5_RX_PIN
(Unfortunately, wirish/boards/maple_RET6.h cannot, since at least
one of the UART4/UART5 pins are used already; this will require layout
changes for a wide-release Maple form factor RET6 board).
* wirish/boards/*.cpp all include the corresponding array definitions.
They all live in flash by default, thanks to the new __FLASH__ macro
in wirish/wirish_types.h, which is a synonym for the existing __attr_flash
#define in libmaple/libmaple_types.h.
The documentation was updated to include this information. It also
gained various FIXME/TODO comments related to its generalization
across boards.
The quality assurance-related examples (examples/qa-slave-shield.cpp
and examples/test-session.cpp) now make heavy use of board-specific
values to ensure portability.
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The old Print class couldn't print uint64 values, and featured
hand-hacked functionality better handled by snprintf(). Redid it
using snprintf(), using "[u]int[8,16,32,64]" types for more clarity,
and eliminated some private methods in favor of auxiliary functions in
Print.cpp.
Breaking compatibility with original implementation in three ways:
- Print::print(double) is now accurate to 6 digits, rather
than 2; this is consistent with the default behavior of the %f
format specifier, and if you're using floating point, it's slow
enough that you probably want the increased accuracy.
- The only bases you can print a number to are 2, 8, 10, and
16. 8, 10, and 16 already have format specifiers, and 2 is an
important special case; others complicate matters unnecessarily.
- Printing numbers in bases other than 10 treats them as
unsigned quantities (i.e., won't print '-' characters). This is
more consistent with C++'s behavior for hexadecimal and octal
literals (e.g., 0xFFFFFFFF has type uint32).
Updated HardwareSerial and USBSerial class documentation to reflect
the new behavior.
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