@ronalchn Strictly, you can use various schemes to extend the amount of memory used. I believe that the amount available under those schemes is, relatively speaking, infinite.
@LuchianGrigore Order his questions by votes. On the fourth page (of 17), we're down to the score of one per question, on the sixth down to zero, the last four pages are negative votes. Only one in 40 people looking at his most-upvoted question upvoted it, but he also managed to get a score of -4 for a question with 3.6k views. These are all very bad signs, IYAM.
@LuchianGrigore I haven't played around with an Arduino, but it's an embedded platform that uses modular shields to add hardware functionality and is generally programmed with a weird language based on "Wiring" and usually based around some ATmega uProcessor,
@LuchianGrigore Towards the end of the second page of tags there's node.cs, about which I recently didn't know even what it is. Interesting, though, that SO finds no postings of mine with that tag
@LuchianGrigore That's one thing I also thought already. FWIW, after posting the same question thrice, and showing a permanent resistance towards learning, I have flagged the mods to have a look at that guy.
@sehe No actually it was quite neat. Each "process" was nothing more than a state-machine. The main loop called all the processes in a loop. each process then executed one state and returned. It was a cheap way of doing cooperative multitasking
@ronalchn The smaller ones usually don't, but a lot do. Some use a lightweight multitasking executive and the larger ones use full blown Linux and Windows CE etc.
@ronalchn Well, the term "embedded systems" has more than one meaning. But yes, a lot of embedded systems use microcontrollers instead of standard general purpose CPUS.
@KonradRudolph I tried to understand those reasons, but didn't really manage to. There are two questions about that on SO, but neither seems to have convincing reasons :/
@Chimera The definition changes (a lot) over time as well -- ignoring other parts, the CPU itself on a Pandaboard is probably faster than a Cray-1 was for most tasks.
@KonradRudolph oh wait yes it was the Q&A session, but the clang developer explained that constexpr functions were the hardest part to implement of all, and that it took several months.
@BartekBanachewicz That's not unique to a Pandaboard -- a typical current cell phone probably now has more total processing capability than a Cray-1 did.
@JerryCoffin That is true. The "traditional" definition of an embedded device is a system that is designed to perform one function, such as an ATM machine, and not be easily re-programmable
@Chimera Oh -- thank you. But there are others to whom some extra rep probably means a lot more than it does to me. He's not around at the moment, but perhaps @Drise?
@Chimera They're pretty careful to not reveal the details publicly (otherwise it'd be easy to work around). AFAIK, if you spend some time actually reading and only up-vote those that seem deserving, you're unlikely to hit the filter.
@Chimera I just upvote whatever I think deserves it and sometimes this happens to hit serveral answers of the same person in a row (e.g. when looking through their profile). I just hope that that doesn’t trigger the filter. No idea if it ever did
@KonradRudolph It had half a dozen, but it's now, two months later, off the starboard nevertheless. You can, however, still promote the idea. Smug look.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would star that, but then we have just another dumb jpg link on the starboard. If someone could post it in textual form, though... Oh, wait.
@KonradRudolph The interesting part was at 16 minutes. I think I roughly get it now. Basically you already need half a year to implement constexpr in it's current form and doing any more would be suicide ^^
@Chimera A few facts: 1. I didn't read it. 2. Horstmann was known for knowing a thing or two about C++ back in the 90s. (I think he was the first to implement an STL with safety belts in debug mode. He wrote articles, IIRC.) I don't know how this extends to his abilities to writing such a book. 3. Nobody has ever suggested this book for the book FAQ.
I was wondering, how is your coding flow? Do you make whole classes and function and then let the compiler guide you in typos or such, or do you make small changes at a time?
@R.MartinhoFernandes do you ever stop to think I might be upset by the constant bullying over my poor spelling? I'm not, but do you ever think that it might upset me?