grbl-LPC-CoreXY/grbl/print.c
Sonny Jeon ed790c9fa2 v1.1d: Tweaked interface a bit. Added realtime spindle speed and build option data. Minor bug fixes.
- Increment to v1.1d due to interface tweaks.

- Based on GUI dev feedback, the toggle overrides report was removed
and replace with showing “accessory state”. This shows a character if a
particular accessory is enabled, like the spindle or flood coolant.
These can be directly altered by the toggle overrides, so when they
execute, a GUI will be able to observe the state altering as feedback.

- Altered the real-time feed rate to show real-time spindle speed as
well. It was an over-sight on my part. It’s needed because it’s hard to
know what the current spindle speed is when overrides are altering it.
Especially during something like a laser cutting job when its important
to know how spindle speed overrides are effecting things.

- Real-time spindle speed is not shown if VARIABLE_SPINDLE is disabled.
The old real-time feed rate data field will show instead.

- Compile-time option data is now included in another message
immediately following the build info version string, starting with
`[OPT:`. A character code follows the data type name with each
indicating a particular option enabled or disabled. This will help
immensely with debugging Grbl as well as help GUIs know exactly how
Grbl was compiled.

- These interface changes are detailed in the updated documentation.

- Reduced the default planner buffer size from 17 to 16. Needed to free
up some memory…

- For increasing the serial TX buffer size from 90 to 104 bytes. The
addition of real-time spindle speeds and accessory enable data required
a bigger buffer. This is to ensure Grbl is performing at optimal levels.

- Refactored parts of the spindle and coolant control code to make it
more consistent to each other and how it was called. It was a little
messy. The changes made it easier to track what each function call was
doing based on what was calling it.

- Created a couple of new get_state functions for the spindle and
coolant. These are called by the accessory state report to look
directly at the pin state, rather than track how it was set. This
guarantees that the state is reported correctly.

- Updated the g-code parser, parking motion, sleep mode, and spindle
stop calls to refactored spindle and coolant code.

- Added a compile-time option to enable homing individual axes, rather
than having only the main homing cycle. The actual use case for this is
pretty rare. It’s not recommended you enable this, unless you have a
specific application for it. Otherwise, just alter the homing cycle
itself.

- Refactored the printFloat() function to not show a decimal point if
there are no trailing values after it. For example, `1.` now shows `1`.

- Fixed an issue regarding spindle speed overrides no being applied to
blocks without motions.

- Removed the toggle_ovr_mask system variable and replaced with
spindle_stop_ovr system variable. Coolant toggles don’t need to be
tracked.

- Updated README
2016-10-17 23:48:25 -06:00

201 lines
4.9 KiB
C

/*
print.c - Functions for formatting output strings
Part of Grbl
Copyright (c) 2011-2016 Sungeun K. Jeon for Gnea Research LLC
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud
Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "grbl.h"
void printString(const char *s)
{
while (*s)
serial_write(*s++);
}
// Print a string stored in PGM-memory
void printPgmString(const char *s)
{
char c;
while ((c = pgm_read_byte_near(s++)))
serial_write(c);
}
// void printIntegerInBase(unsigned long n, unsigned long base)
// {
// unsigned char buf[8 * sizeof(long)]; // Assumes 8-bit chars.
// unsigned long i = 0;
//
// if (n == 0) {
// serial_write('0');
// return;
// }
//
// while (n > 0) {
// buf[i++] = n % base;
// n /= base;
// }
//
// for (; i > 0; i--)
// serial_write(buf[i - 1] < 10 ?
// '0' + buf[i - 1] :
// 'A' + buf[i - 1] - 10);
// }
// Prints an uint8 variable in base 10.
void print_uint8_base10(uint8_t n)
{
uint8_t digit_a = 0;
uint8_t digit_b = 0;
if (n >= 100) { // 100-255
digit_a = '0' + n % 10;
n /= 10;
}
if (n >= 10) { // 10-99
digit_b = '0' + n % 10;
n /= 10;
}
serial_write('0' + n);
if (digit_b) { serial_write(digit_b); }
if (digit_a) { serial_write(digit_a); }
}
// Prints an uint8 variable in base 2 with desired number of desired digits.
void print_uint8_base2_ndigit(uint8_t n, uint8_t digits) {
unsigned char buf[digits];
uint8_t i = 0;
for (; i < digits; i++) {
buf[i] = n % 2 ;
n /= 2;
}
for (; i > 0; i--)
serial_write('0' + buf[i - 1]);
}
void print_uint32_base10(uint32_t n)
{
if (n == 0) {
serial_write('0');
return;
}
unsigned char buf[10];
uint8_t i = 0;
while (n > 0) {
buf[i++] = n % 10;
n /= 10;
}
for (; i > 0; i--)
serial_write('0' + buf[i-1]);
}
void printInteger(long n)
{
if (n < 0) {
serial_write('-');
print_uint32_base10(-n);
} else {
print_uint32_base10(n);
}
}
// Convert float to string by immediately converting to a long integer, which contains
// more digits than a float. Number of decimal places, which are tracked by a counter,
// may be set by the user. The integer is then efficiently converted to a string.
// NOTE: AVR '%' and '/' integer operations are very efficient. Bitshifting speed-up
// techniques are actually just slightly slower. Found this out the hard way.
void printFloat(float n, uint8_t decimal_places)
{
if (n < 0) {
serial_write('-');
n = -n;
}
uint8_t decimals = decimal_places;
while (decimals >= 2) { // Quickly convert values expected to be E0 to E-4.
n *= 100;
decimals -= 2;
}
if (decimals) { n *= 10; }
n += 0.5; // Add rounding factor. Ensures carryover through entire value.
// Generate digits backwards and store in string.
unsigned char buf[13];
uint8_t i = 0;
uint32_t a = (long)n;
while(a > 0) {
buf[i++] = (a % 10) + '0'; // Get digit
a /= 10;
}
while (i < decimal_places) {
buf[i++] = '0'; // Fill in zeros to decimal point for (n < 1)
}
if (i == decimal_places) { // Fill in leading zero, if needed.
buf[i++] = '0';
}
// Print the generated string.
for (; i > 0; i--) {
if (i == decimal_places) { serial_write('.'); } // Insert decimal point in right place.
serial_write(buf[i-1]);
}
}
// Floating value printing handlers for special variables types used in Grbl and are defined
// in the config.h.
// - CoordValue: Handles all position or coordinate values in inches or mm reporting.
// - RateValue: Handles feed rate and current velocity in inches or mm reporting.
void printFloat_CoordValue(float n) {
if (bit_istrue(settings.flags,BITFLAG_REPORT_INCHES)) {
printFloat(n*INCH_PER_MM,N_DECIMAL_COORDVALUE_INCH);
} else {
printFloat(n,N_DECIMAL_COORDVALUE_MM);
}
}
void printFloat_RateValue(float n) {
if (bit_istrue(settings.flags,BITFLAG_REPORT_INCHES)) {
printFloat(n*INCH_PER_MM,N_DECIMAL_RATEVALUE_INCH);
} else {
printFloat(n,N_DECIMAL_RATEVALUE_MM);
}
}
// Debug tool to print free memory in bytes at the called point.
// NOTE: Keep commented unless using. Part of this function always gets compiled in.
// void printFreeMemory()
// {
// extern int __heap_start, *__brkval;
// uint16_t free; // Up to 64k values.
// free = (int) &free - (__brkval == 0 ? (int) &__heap_start : (int) __brkval);
// printInteger((int32_t)free);
// printString(" ");
// }