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Fine editor for working with Duet boards

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  • undefined
    Nightowl @fcwilt
    last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 18:25

    @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

    I use to use CP/M

    You've probably been around longer than me, then!

    Few things are more dangerous than taking the advice of someone who thinks he knows what he's doing.
    I'm still on my learning curve, so take everything I say with caution!

    RatRig 1075, Duet3 MB6HC, Sorotec SFM 1000 PV-ER milling motor, Hobbyist

    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 18:36 Reply Quote 1
    • undefined
      JuJuDelta @Nightowl
      last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 18:36

      Intel's Aedit running on MS-DOS was the best!
      8" floppies, MCS-51 Dev system on wheels the size of a fridge.
      And before that punched tape and cards!
      You didn't run programs, you submitted them as a batch file overnight, to then find out you made a typo!
      You "Younglings" are spoilt 🙂

      T3DP3D Kossel XL+, Duet2Wifi, PanelDue 7i, RRF V3.2, Fl3xdrive, SmartEffector, Berd Air annulus, Cura 4.x, PrusaSlicer, RPi WiFi Camera, Heated Chamber

      undefined undefined undefined 3 Replies Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 18:40 Reply Quote 3
      • undefined
        Nightowl @JuJuDelta
        last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 18:40

        @jujudelta Haha!

        I do remember taking hours to programming a Sinclair ZX80 for it to beep, and finding I'd mis-typed something - or the magazine I'd tried to copy it from had an important piece of code cut with staples!

        Few things are more dangerous than taking the advice of someone who thinks he knows what he's doing.
        I'm still on my learning curve, so take everything I say with caution!

        RatRig 1075, Duet3 MB6HC, Sorotec SFM 1000 PV-ER milling motor, Hobbyist

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • undefined
          fcwilt @JuJuDelta
          last edited by fcwilt 6 Jan 2022, 18:52 1 Jun 2022, 18:51

          @jujudelta said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

          Intel's Aedit running on MS-DOS was the best!
          8" floppies, MCS-51 Dev system on wheels the size of a fridge.
          And before that punched tape and cards!
          You didn't run programs, you submitted them as a batch file overnight, to then find out you made a typo!
          You "Younglings" are spoilt 🙂

          My first "programming" was on IBM accounting machines. You inserted a bunch of jumper wires from one hole to another, on a big "patch panel", to control what the machines did.

          They couldn't do very much but they were large and loud!

          And when the rest of my friends were at schools learning Fortran I was learning ALGOL, of which I remember absolutely nothing.

          Frederick

          Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

          undefined 1 Reply Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 19:05 Reply Quote 1
          • undefined
            infiniteloop @fcwilt
            last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 19:05

            @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

            My first "programming" was on IBM accounting machines.

            My first micro had a "keyboard" with two buttons and 2x8 DIP switches: one DIP to enter the address, the other to enter a data byte. The red button transferred a byte into one of the 256 bytes of RAM, the green button ran the program. As display, I had 8 LEDs.

            undefined 1 Reply Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 19:12 Reply Quote 1
            • undefined
              fcwilt @infiniteloop
              last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 19:12

              @infiniteloop said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

              @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

              My first "programming" was on IBM accounting machines.

              My first micro had a "keyboard" with two buttons and 2x8 DIP switches: one DIP to enter the address, the other to enter a data byte. The red button transferred a byte into one of the 256 bytes of RAM, the green button ran the program. As display, I had 8 LEDs.

              That must of been kind of tedious.

              But it sounds something like an Intel microprocessor development system we had, which had a bunch of switches on the front. I remember we used them to enter the "boot loader" which then could read in the actual program from a paper tape reader.

              Frederick

              Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

              undefined 1 Reply Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 19:16 Reply Quote 0
              • undefined
                infiniteloop @fcwilt
                last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 19:16

                @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                That must of been kind of tedious.

                Don't worry, the next machine I could work with was a IBM 5100 😉

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • undefined
                  mikeabuilder
                  last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 23:20

                  I still have a prototype HP Intel 486 machine in my basement. It was really hot stuff at the time. My processor was double clocked - from 20Mhz to 40Mhz. That was hot stuff in it's time, about 30 years ago.

                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 1 Jun 2022, 23:57 Reply Quote 1
                  • undefined
                    fcwilt @mikeabuilder
                    last edited by 1 Jun 2022, 23:57

                    @mikeabuilder said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                    I still have a prototype HP Intel 486 machine in my basement. It was really hot stuff at the time. My processor was double clocked - from 20Mhz to 40Mhz. That was hot stuff in it's time, about 30 years ago.

                    Fun times for sure. I remember upgrading an IBM desktop from 4 to 6-8 Mhz - heady stuff.

                    Who dreamed where we would be today with gigahertz clock speeds, gigabytes of memory and terabytes of solid state drives.

                    Frederick

                    Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 12:57 Reply Quote 0
                    • undefined
                      OwenD
                      last edited by OwenD 6 Feb 2022, 02:24 2 Jun 2022, 02:24

                      @fcwilt
                      Looks good 👍
                      I have been using a free editor called
                      RJ Texted.
                      It also has FTP, but I haven't used it.
                      I did a syntax file that allows auto completion and does mouse over help hints for existing files.
                      https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/14637/reprap-g-code-syntax-now-part-of-rj-texted-text-editor/2?_=1654136072761

                      The syntax file is no longer included as standard because it was changing too quickly.

                      I see that you can do syntax highlighters in your editor as well, so it would be good for someone to do so.

                      I looked at doing one for Notepad ++ but it was to clunky

                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 03:07 Reply Quote 1
                      • undefined
                        fcwilt @OwenD
                        last edited by fcwilt 6 Feb 2022, 12:02 2 Jun 2022, 03:07

                        @owend said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                        @fcwilt
                        Looks good 👍
                        I have been using a free editor called
                        RJ Texted.
                        It also has FTP, but I haven't used it.
                        I did a syntax file that allows auto completion and does mouse over help hints for existing files.
                        https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/14637/reprap-g-code-syntax-now-part-of-rj-texted-text-editor/2?_=1654136072761

                        I see that you can do syntax highlighters in your editor as well, so it would be good for someone to do so.

                        There are many syntax highlighters available, some created by the programs creator, some by end users.

                        I haven't looked into how to make one but the Java one does give some highlighting.

                        EditPad Java Highlighter.png

                        Is highlighting an "art form" or are there specific rules for each type of file?

                        Frederick

                        Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 07:49 Reply Quote 0
                        • undefined
                          OwenD @fcwilt
                          last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 07:49

                          @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                          Is highlighting an "art form" or are there specific rules for each type of file?

                          I don't know if there are any rules per se.
                          Mostly they use some sort of regex or keyword list to determine what to highlight.

                          undefined 1 Reply Last reply 3 Jun 2022, 05:22 Reply Quote 1
                          • undefined
                            Coffee @JuJuDelta
                            last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 12:15

                            @jujudelta said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                            Intel's Aedit running on MS-DOS was the best!
                            8" floppies, MCS-51 Dev system on wheels the size of a fridge.
                            And before that punched tape and cards!
                            You didn't run programs, you submitted them as a batch file overnight, to then find out you made a typo!
                            You "Younglings" are spoilt 🙂

                            Sneaking in a batch of cards to print KISS's logo a few dozen times to give to friends!

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • undefined
                              deckingman @fcwilt
                              last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 12:57

                              @fcwilt said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                              @mikeabuilder said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                              I still have a prototype HP Intel 486 machine in my basement. It was really hot stuff at the time. My processor was double clocked - from 20Mhz to 40Mhz. That was hot stuff in it's time, about 30 years ago.

                              Fun times for sure. I remember upgrading an IBM desktop from 4 to 6-8 Mhz - heady stuff.

                              Who dreamed where we would be today with gigahertz clock speeds, gigabytes of memory and terabytes of solid state drives.

                              Frederick

                              My first was a Sinclair ZX81 (8 bit processor with 1K memory and cassette tape for "non-volatile" storage) circa 1981 that I bought in kit form. My second was a Texas Instruments TI-994A that I bought a couple of years later (so circa 1983) with a 16bit 3Mhz processor and separate VDP (Video Display Processor as they were called in those days).

                              By 1983 I was 30 years old and these machines were big steps up from calculators, which in turn were big steps up from slide rules and books of log tables that was all we had in my school days.

                              Ian
                              https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
                              https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

                              undefined 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 16:38 Reply Quote 1
                              • undefined
                                cosmowave
                                last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 13:37

                                Until 2009 i've built special machines with a Z80 controller board (2MHz, 2kB RAM).
                                The complete controller board and all other electronic boards was soldered by hand... 💪

                                I loved it to write programs in Z80 assembler. But the begin was hard!

                                Mankati FSXT+, DeltaTowerV2, E3D MS/TC

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • undefined
                                  fcwilt @deckingman
                                  last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 16:38

                                  @deckingman said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                                  By 1983 I was 30 years old and these machines were big steps up from calculators, which in turn were big steps up from slide rules and books of log tables that was all we had in my school days.

                                  I still have mine.

                                  Slide Rules 3.png

                                  The white one is a typical one while the yellow one was for all things electronic.

                                  They are a bit more than 50 years old.

                                  Frederick

                                  Printers: a small Utilmaker style, a small CoreXY and a E3D MS/TC setup. Various hotends. Using Duet 3 hardware running 3.4.6

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • undefined
                                    Phaedrux Moderator
                                    last edited by Phaedrux 6 Feb 2022, 17:31 2 Jun 2022, 17:30

                                    Seeing as this has turned into an after school computer club thread, I'll share with you a "retro" computing device that you might find interesting.

                                    https://github.com/MiSTer-devel/Main_MiSTer/wiki

                                    It uses a FPGA board to do hardware emulation of old computers, consoles, arcade machines, etc. The list of supported devices is long. You can even emulate a PDP-1 if you like, and all the way up to a 486 class device capable of windows 95.

                                    https://github.com/MiSTer-devel/PDP1_MiSTer

                                    alt text

                                    Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

                                    undefined undefined 2 Replies Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 17:34 Reply Quote 2
                                    • undefined
                                      infiniteloop @Phaedrux
                                      last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 17:34

                                      @phaedrux said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                                      this has turned into an after school computer club thread

                                      … of grumpy old men 😊

                                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 18:50 Reply Quote 2
                                      • undefined
                                        deckingman @infiniteloop
                                        last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 18:50

                                        @infiniteloop said in Fine editor for working with Duet boards:

                                        … of grumpy old men 😊

                                        .........of which, I am the oldest and many would say the grumpiest, therefore the most senior member of that auspicious club. 😁

                                        Ian
                                        https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
                                        https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

                                        undefined undefined 2 Replies Last reply 2 Jun 2022, 20:36 Reply Quote 0
                                        • undefined
                                          mikeabuilder
                                          last edited by 2 Jun 2022, 19:03

                                          @deckingman - love the slide rules. When I was in high school, my class was the last year that pocket calculators were prohibited in chemistry class. We had to use slide rules. The reason was that pocket calculators were so expensive that it was considered an unfair advantage for those that could afford one.

                                          I also learned programming with punchcards.

                                          Good times...

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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