@MoonOwlPrince, I inherited some old books from my neighbor and one day, my family and I were moving and mom said I have to get rid some of my books. I kept the Feynman books and VB but I threw away the Pascal books.
@Code-Apprentice it is, but people will assume you're mispronouncing Pascal rather than assume you're talking about a very similar-sounding language they've never heard of
@KalaJ I now regret it though. Apparently, Pascal was a better educational language than C around its time. According to Joel Spolsky (2004), Mac OS had Pascal strings all over the place
I detest the sensationalism that surrounds anything that seems to be new yet it is actually just a mediocre joe bringing more problems into our households
@KendallFrey On that same note, Java developers got excited all over the web about lambda expressions as if they were something groundbreaking yet in actual fact they have been there for as long as LISp was first implemented
I can guarantee you everyday we will get someone screaming out about language X that has solved problem Y for good as if problem Y was not solved more than half a century before.
@SteveG well it's so slow, you need to have something else to do while you wait, yeah?
Does the TPL work-stealing algorithm context switch? I'm assuming not, since a context switch is for a thread, and TPL tends to try to allocate work on as few threads as it considers will be performant. So is there an analogous process to context switching that happens in that algorithm, or does it genuinely avoid the performance penalty of context switching by not doing it (as much)?
@KendallFrey Think about a situation whereby different windows belonging to your application are open at the same time and you have two users on a touch interfaces interacting with each window at the same time
> The .NET Framework 4 ThreadPool also features a work-stealing algorithm to help make sure that no threads are sitting idle while others still have work in their queues.
I have a scenario I'm trying to wrap my head arround.
So I have two different servers I need to connect to, each having a different response time (one is fast, one is slow). There's a for loop which runs for a fixed amount of time for both servers, creating threads and starting them. Basically I...
there are some drivers for the example projects. But what I am confused about I guess is if I want to communicate with my device as something other than a virtual COM port, how would I do that? What, if any, drivers would I have to write?
BTW. I know you may or may not know the answer to these questions I'm asking so I'm not expecting you to answer them. Just enjoying discussing it with you all.
But it will expand to using DMA to communicate with some other MCUs that will actually control the LEDs
as far as the "program" goes, what I am calling the "program" is something running on the host machine that is capturing part of the screen. I want to send that data to my MCU via USB.
download the ZIP and look at the files. You're basically going to want to do the same, unless you're selling it then I think you'll ultimately want a Vendor class device
I don't really have time now :( but I can check it out and answer any questions you might have tomorrow (or help you find the answer, more likely! It's been 3+ years for me since microcontrollers class!)