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| | Re: The datalog
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| (...) numbers. It can only log timers, sensors, variables, and the system watch. When a value is logged, its source is also logged. For example, AddToDatalog(Timer(1)) adds the current value of Timer 1 to the log and also stores that this entry came (...) (24 years ago, 5-Oct-00, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
| | | | Re: The datalog
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| BTW, what does the datalog *store*? Numbers? Events? Anything? And what good is it for (besides the methods we've disscussed earlier)? --Tobias (...) (24 years ago, 4-Oct-00, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
| | | | Re: The datalog
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| (...) Each call to AddToDatalog() uses up one "point". Each point takes up 3 bytes of memory: a 1-byte code for the source of point (sensor, timer, etc), then a 2-byte value. 123456 is too big to fit into the log. This would either generate a (...) (24 years ago, 4-Oct-00, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
| | | | Re: Scout poweroff time out?
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| (...) thanks. Comments are always welcome....that's not saying that I'll implement everything that anyone suggests, but I certainly appreciate the feedback. NQC wouldn't have gotten this far without the suggestions of the user community. Dave (24 years ago, 4-Oct-00, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc, lugnet.robotics.scout)
| | | | Re: The datalog
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| (...) Dave, I have a question about the datalog. In the manual you state that the createdatalog function creates a datalog of x many points. How much is a point? Is that how many unique entries can be made or an overall 'byte' amount? Is a value (...) (24 years ago, 3-Oct-00, to lugnet.robotics.rcx.nqc)
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