| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines | 
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This should get replaced with a clean-room MIT licensed version, but
pieces of it are ours (notably the bugfixes to the floating point
printing routines), so might as well do the copyright thing.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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Move libmaple/*.h to (new) libmaple/include/libmaple/. The new
accepted way to include a libmaple header foo.h is with:
    #include <libmaple/foo.h>
This is more polite in terms of the include namespace. It also allows
us to e.g. implement the Arduino SPI library at all (which has header
SPI.h; providing it was previously impossible on case-insensitive
filesystems due to libmaple's spi.h).
Similarly for Wirish.
The old include style (#include "header.h") is now deprecated.
libmaple/*.h:
- Change include guard #defines from _FOO_H_ to _LIBMAPLE_FOO_H_.
- Add license headers where they're missing
- Add conditional extern "C" { ... } blocks where they're missing
  (they aren't always necessary, but we might was well do it against
  the future, while we're at it.).
- Change includes from #include "foo.h" to #include <libmaple/foo.h>.
- Move includes after extern "C".
- Remove extra trailing newlines
Note that this doesn't include the headers under libmaple/usb/ or
libmaple/usb/usb_lib. These will get fixed later.
libmaple/*.c:
- Change includes from #include "foo.h" to #include <libmaple/foo.h>.
Makefile:
- Add I$(LIBMAPLE_PATH)/include/libmaple to GLOBAL_FLAGS.  This allows
  for users (including Wirish) to migrate their code, but should go
  away ASAP, since it slows down compilation.
Wirish:
- Move wirish/**/*.h to (new) wirish/include/wirish/.  This ignores
  the USB headers, which, as usual, are getting handled after
  everything else.
- Similarly generify wirish/boards/ structure. For each supported
  board "foo", move wirish/boards/foo.h and wirish/boards/foo.cpp to
  wirish/boards/foo/include/board/board.h and
  wirish/boards/foo/board.cpp, respectively. Also remove the #ifdef
  hacks around the .cpp files.
- wirish/rules.mk: put wirish/boards/foo/include in the include path
  (and add wirish/boards/foo/board.cpp to the list of sources to be
  compiled). This allows saying:
      #include <board/board.h>
  instead of the hack currently in place. We can allow the user to
  override this setting later to make adding custom board definitions
  easier.
- Disable -Werror in libmaple/rules.mk, as the current USB warnings
  don't let the olimex_stm32_h103 board compile. We can re-enable
  -Werror once we've moved the board-specific bits out of libmaple
  proper.
libraries, examples:
- Update includes accordingly.
- Miscellaneous cosmetic fixups.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <mbolivar@leaflabs.com>
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Add base argument to integral Print methods, defaulting to DEC so as
not to break backwards compatibility.  Add precision argument to
floating-point Print methods.
These changes increase compatibility with the Arduino Print
implementation.
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The users really hated the code size requirements for an snprintf()-based
Print implementation, but I really hated how bad the old implementation was.
Revised version fixes bugs related to printing 64-bit values and has some
improved behavior when it comes to printing doubles.  Now, instead of
happily printing garbage values when large doubles are printed, we try
printing "<large double>" or "-<large double>" (depending on sign) when
the argument is too big for the old strategy to accommodate.
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This reverts commit 8bd3cebbee62e2dd7e961b149cc8bb0e980eaf88.
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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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-updated examples
-removed HardwareUSB
-cleaned up a handful of includes
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The 'core' directory has now been renamed to 'wirish.' Wirish is our
version of the Arduino Wiring language.
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