From the videos I've seen it seems to work quite well. The chicken have to move far back to close the lid so they don't get their head stuck in it if that's what you're scared of.
As for write you might want to check this Serial.availableForWrite()
it seems to return the amount of data available in the buffer so if you see the the buffer isn't empty then there is still some data to send.
That said regarding your issue, you can use a well defined protocol
It would be more secure like that I guess
For example you send a message that can be decoded on the other end. On each message sent, your other side of the client has to answer with an aknowledge message back
you can send a byte like 0 to mean that the message was succefully received / parsed
But you expect something back?
A timeout could also be used that if you don't receive the a response, then you restart the process including reseting init if necessary
it reminds me abit of an issue I had with a NFC card reader, I eventually had to shut down the power on the USB ports to restart the device because the driver on the RPi had a bug
Lidar works most of the times, but sometimes something goes wrong and micro-controller would start receiving garbage data from lidar. I think I will just reset the device in those cases.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Yeah 1) use a C++ compiler targeting AVR 2) Arduino sketches support modern C++ features (you can even get C++17 by passing -std=gnu++17).
@Morwenn Yeah, its a pretty darn slow (stackoverflow.com/questions/15124900/…) and I don't understand their arguments about precision. It seems that writing a small addition to the library serves as a PhD thesis :-)
@Morwenn, the more I think about it, the more CGAL seems like an anti-pattern
@Morwenn I actually ended up presenting <cereal> which was pretty clean
But for tonight I’ll say this was a disgusting moment for democracy. Donald Trump made it so, and Chris Wallace let him. I hope there are no more debates before this election. If they happen, I won’t waste another minute of my life watching them.
The modern presidential debate was invented in 1960. We may have seen the end of its useful life this evening.
user7659542
6:32 AM
So I recently had a new client whose firm is total chaos. I was initially put in charge to just write their software development plan and test plan. Turns out those people have no formal process at all, therefor I had to come up with an applicable process and describe this. Next to this, they never did any testing. So I had to come up with an a testing strategy, methodology and so on and so forth
user7659542
Now I have been told the company is loosing loads of money. They want that multi million dollar project they have been informally promised by their client but are lacking financial means to reach the required quality standards. I was told that by the CEO. Some engineers cost too much and they will not be able to keep them during the entire development/preparation of the project
user7659542
So now it is my task, as the new guy, to go speak with those people to understand how much time they will need and how muuch work needs to e done to reach the required objective. Once that will be settled I will have to discuss with them my price and their price/salary to make it fit the CEO's foreseen budget
user7659542
I mean...
user7659542
Isn't this some sort of fcked up situation? Or is it just me?
@ratchetfreak during the last meeting they implicitely said they considered a 50% pay cut for me. But he didn't say it explicitely, presumably it was to see how far he would be able to reduce my price...
user7659542
Frankly speaking I have not foreseen to lower my tarifs
user7659542
8:43 AM
I like doing this, I consider this a "strategy consulting" which IMO is an incredibly interesting field.
user7659542
But at the same time I am affraid they are jus trying to give me the dirty work he does not want to do in order to not be hated by employees.
I realised that I was the lab rat for some marketing research - so there is one kind of coconut white milk biscuit that I quite like. One week, it's 33% off, so I bought 1 pack from this supermarket. The very next week, it's 50% off. I was like 'I like this biscuit, but I have already got some at home'. So I didn't buy. The third week, it's 66% off, so I bought 2 packets despite still having some at home. #lostgame
Nothing works for me either, I'm confined at home, I don't understand much about what I'm doing at work, it's stormy outside and I don't have any beer left in the fridge
@nwp I feared that too at first, but it turns out that I'm sufficiently non-productive at the office that it doesn't make a difference when I work from home
But I can do a bunch of house tasks during noon instead of doing nothing, and I don't waste 1h~1h30 driving every day
I find very frustrating to have to fix C++ errors happening at linkage time (especially undefined reference errors) due to the fact that all the function names are mangled. An example of mangled name:
_ZNK5boost7archive6detail11oserializerINS0_13text_oarchiveEN9galandria8UniverseEE16save_object_d...
It works fine on Qt Creator. Just press Ctrl+G+C and it'll show you what files changed, double click to see the merge, type a message and all is good.
But now I'm in Eclipse that probably has a plugin somewhere in the market place that I could fuck around with for hours, but I'll use git bash instead.
And oh boy, even looking at a diff in git bash is a pain.
it can if you're really disciplined about how you use git. But I've not seen a gui toolkit that deals well with interactive rebases, cherry-picks and a good way to navigate reflog
because I'm messy af and need to clean up the mess I made all the time
Eclipse IDE for Java Developers: The essential tools for any Java developer, including a Java IDE, a Git client, XML Editor, Maven and Gradle integration
technically all the code in your submodule will be tracked into .git/modules of your root repository
unless you did something like git clean or git reset --hard git should prevent doing anything or you have some kind of build tool that overwrite your things
> Have you ever staged some files in git, forgot to commit them and then messed something up? Fear not, staged files are usually recoverable within a certain time frame! pangit lets you browse all recently staged files, even uncommitted ones, sorted by most recently staged.
Why are you guys even mentioning git gc? :D "Look, there's this button that destroys the world. Please don't press it, ok? Just thought you should know it exists."
what it means is that your .git folder can be a of a few megabytes while the referenced objects don't have to be copied twice
At work we have multiple client setup
so each client use more or less the same platform but can use different commits
so you end up with multiple checkout but only one place to store all git objects, it's a pain to manage thought but if space constraint is a thing it's worth it
But in all honesty disk space cost next to nothing nowadays. I finally got some NFS drive setups done my personal docker swarm that space is almost a non issue now.