Hi Bruce, I emailed the link to the pdf to tech at rentron dot com. Thanks for looking.
I would have PM ed but . . .
JS
Hi Bruce, I emailed the link to the pdf to tech at rentron dot com. Thanks for looking.
I would have PM ed but . . .
JS
If you do not believe in MAGIC, Consider how currency has value simply by printing it, and is then traded for real assets.
.
Gold is the money of kings, silver is the money of gentlemen, barter is the money of peasants - but debt is the money of slaves
.
There simply is no "Happy Spam" If you do it you will disappear from this forum.
Hi Joe,
Could you send me that link again? For some reason I didn't get the first one.
I have done so. Thank You
EDIT:
I think I am beginning to see, he has switched up the segments to ports in reverse order and taken 2 of them to another port altogether. RC5 = B, RC4 = C, RC3 = D . . . so Why does the C language list binary in 2 different formats, I. E. 0x00000000, and 0b00000000 ?
Last edited by Archangel; - 3rd July 2008 at 17:18.
If you do not believe in MAGIC, Consider how currency has value simply by printing it, and is then traded for real assets.
.
Gold is the money of kings, silver is the money of gentlemen, barter is the money of peasants - but debt is the money of slaves
.
There simply is no "Happy Spam" If you do it you will disappear from this forum.
I couldn't download the schematic, but that does look like what he's doing by just looking
at the source code. This would be a lot easier with all 7-bits on a single port.
It varies from one compiler to the other. C18, CCS and Hi-Tech use the 0b00000000 format.Why does the C language list binary in 2 different formats, I. E. 0x00000000, and 0b00000000 ?
0x is normally for HEX numbers. CCX5 uses 0b.0000.0000 format for binary.
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