Use printf() in Arduino programs
Are you happiest with printf() debugging? Do circumstances lead to you writing "arduino code" because it's just about the easiest way to set up an embedded software project that's not to different from C(++)? I have something for you.
I've only tested it on a sample of 1 board (the Adafruit Feather M4 Express) but I suspect that it works on a wide variety of arm-based (or, actually, newlib-based) boards.
Long story short, put the following code in your .ino
file, call Serial.begin()
as usual, then use
printf(...)
and fprintf(stderr, ...)
just
like you would anywhere. The only caveat I've discovered so far is that
printing floating-point numbers didn't work for me.
// This bridges from stdio output to Serial.write #include <errno.h> #undef errno extern int errno; extern "C" int _write(int file, char *ptr, int len); int _write(int file, char *ptr, int len) { if (file < 1 || file > 3) { errno = EBADF; return -1; } if (file == 3) { // File 3 does not do \n -> \r\n transformation Serial.write(ptr, len); return len; } // color stderr static bool stderr_flag; bool is_stderr = (file == 2); if (is_stderr != stderr_flag) { if (is_stderr) { Serial.write("\033[95m"); } else { Serial.write("\033[0m"); } stderr_flag = is_stderr; } int result = len; for (; len--; ptr++) { int c = *ptr; if (c == '\n') Serial.write('\r'); Serial.write(c); } return result; } extern "C" int write(int file, char *ptr, int len); int write(int file, char *ptr, int len) __attribute__((alias("_write")));
popen2(), a C function for bidirectional communication with a child process
Be careful of buffering issues! Update, 2009-02-05: This is for POSIX systems like Linux. It won't work on Windows.
Files currently attached to this page:
popen2.c | 1.4kB |
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