Тэги:
#LED #Ez80 #Microcontroller #Microcomputer #BASIC #BBC #FOR_LOOP #PINS #GPIO #FUN #EXPERIMENTКомментарии:
@LearnAgon
I am a little concerned that you are using my code from my recently added video in my channel @TELSBENCH. This 'here' is titled as 'ForLoop study session' but that is not the basis of the code which is intended to inform users how to use GPIO on Agon Light.
I would prefer it if you do not use my code as a substantive part of your videos. Although the code is under the MIT license, this does not seem to me to be fair play that you are winning views off my work.
If you want to learn how my code works, and then create something unique on your own effort, but have questions, you could always post a question on my channel and I will be happy to answer it. Peace.
This looks like the old QBasic program
ОтветитьBASIC ❤
ОтветитьAmateur hour right here, most professional embedded systems development is done in C, C++, or assembly language. I suppose this is OK to teach to children who want to get into electronics... like the Propeller and Parallax stuff.
ОтветитьThis looks like a dialect of BBC BASIC... Though not running on RISC OS... Possibly Brandy or one of Richard Russel's variants... The giveaways here are MODE (flashes up for a moment when he loads the second program.) and the use of "%" to signify integer variables... Also the use of PROC/DEF PROC, IIRC QBasic defined SUBs, rather than PROCs...
ОтветитьWhen I posted that last comment, I hadn’t heard of the Agon platform other than what was in that video… I was commenting based on my experience with developing with BBC BASIC and what I saw watching the video… It just happened that I wasn’t that far off the mark… Reading up on it, it seems to use a Z80 compatible CPU core and a tweaked variant of Richard Russell’s Z80 BBC BASIC port for CP/M…
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