| | Rotation sensor limitation
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I use a rotation sensor for a brick sorting machine hence I need to know the limitation of the rotation sensor. What happens when the rotation sensor exceeds 9999 as shown on the LCD display? Apparently the rotation sensor can still keep track of (...) (20 years ago, 24-Oct-04, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
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| | Re: NQC preprocessor behavior - constants evaluated?
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Code listing of Untitled1: *** Var 47 = x *** Var 46 = y *** Task 0 = main 000 pwr ABC, 7 13 07 02 07 004 dir ABC, Fwd e1 87 006 setv var[47], 150 14 2f 02 96 00 011 setv var[46], 5 14 2e 02 05 00 016 mulv var[46], var[47] 54 2e 00 2f 00 Total size: (...) (20 years ago, 18-Aug-04, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
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| | Re: NQC preprocessor behavior - constants evaluated?
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(...) The preprocessor only evaluates expressions if they are used in a conditional preprocessor statement (i.e. #if), otherwise they are simply treated as a series of tokens for the compiler to deal with. However, the compiler does evaluate (...) (20 years ago, 17-Aug-04, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
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| | NQC preprocessor behavior - constants evaluated?
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Pardon a basic, low-level question, but I'm trying to minimize memory & execution time. Does the NQC preprocessor precalculate constant expressions before the compile pass? For instance: #define CONST 100 #define HALF CONST/2 task main() { int x,y; (...) (20 years ago, 16-Aug-04, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
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| | Re: NQC problem...driving me insane!
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(...) You should check to make sure your light sensor is in fact changing more than 5 counts. Start by changing the above code to 2 or 3. I don't recall with NQC, but with some languages (BrickOS) the values are backwards, so you may need to check (...) (20 years ago, 5-Jul-04, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc, lugnet.org.ca.rtltoronto)
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