Browse Source

Stop requiring editing of example scripts

The example scripts include hardcoded values that
do not work for everyone. Instead of requiring the
files to be edited (and dirtying the git tree),
allow them to take command-line arguments.

Also adds better guidance for Mac OSX virtual
serial ports.
capsense
Joshua Flanagan 8 years ago
parent
commit
cd01bfe0ed
3 changed files with 20 additions and 5 deletions
  1. 8
    2
      Scan/ISSILed/exampleAPI.bash
  2. 4
    1
      Scan/STLcd/bitmap2Struct.py
  3. 8
    2
      Scan/STLcd/exampleAPI.bash

+ 8
- 2
Scan/ISSILed/exampleAPI.bash View File

@@ -3,9 +3,15 @@
# Virtual Serial Port API Example
# Jacob Alexander 2015

if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
echo "You must specify your virtual serialport. (/dev/ttyACM0 on linux, /dev/cu.usbmodemXXXX on OSX)"
echo " ex: $0 /dev/ttyACM0"
exit 1
fi
# XXX Set this to match your virtual serialport
# TODO Show examples for Mac OSX and Cygwin/Windows
SERIALPORT=/dev/ttyACM0
# TODO Show examples for Cygwin/Windows
# For Mac OSX it will be something like /dev/cu.usbmodem1413 (number may differ)
SERIALPORT=$1

# NOTE: Make sure you don't write too quickly to the serial port, it can get overwhelmed by a modern computer
# Generally this just means commands will get ignored

+ 4
- 1
Scan/STLcd/bitmap2Struct.py View File

@@ -110,7 +110,10 @@ class STLcdGraphic:
return display


filename = "ic_logo_lcd.bmp"
filename = sys.argv[1]
if filename is None:
print( "You must specify a bitmap filename. Try './bitmap2Struct.py ic_logo_lcd.bmp'" )
sys.exit( 1 )
max_height = 32
max_width = 128
x_offset = 0

+ 8
- 2
Scan/STLcd/exampleAPI.bash View File

@@ -3,9 +3,15 @@
# Virtual Serial Port API Example
# Jacob Alexander 2015

if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
echo "You must specify your virtual serialport. (/dev/ttyACM0 on linux, /dev/cu.usbmodemXXXX on OSX)"
echo " ex: $0 /dev/ttyACM0"
exit 1
fi
# XXX Set this to match your virtual serialport
# TODO Show examples for Mac OSX and Cygwin/Windows
SERIALPORT=/dev/ttyACM0
# TODO Show example for Cygwin/Windows
# For Mac OSX it will be something like /dev/cu.usbmodem1413 (number may differ)
SERIALPORT=$1

# NOTE: Make sure you don't write too quickly to the serial port, it can get overwhelmed by a modern computer
# Generally this just means commands will get ignored