Firstly, everyone needs to know about tinyurl.com, which allows you to send a tiny URL like http://tinyurl.com/92eaj to point to long URLs (open this one and you'll see it that takes you to a book on Amazon.com that I'm about to refer to).
Secondly, I got this little trick from the book that the link above points to, the book is called "Expert C Programming". Anyhow for an 8 bit LCD bitmap like Vincent mentioned below, do the following: #define X )*2+1 #define _ )*2 #define s ((((((((0 /* 8 parens for 8 bit, 16 for 16, etc) */ Then you just "draw" your bitmap as such: uint8_t lcd_char_P[] = { sXXXXXX__, sX_____X_, sX______X, sX_____X_, sXXXXXX__, sX_______, sX_______, sX_______ } and then make sure you undef the X,s, and _. Now doesn't that look like a big P right in your code ;) Pretty cool little trick. Kind of extravegant but something similar to this sure would have made things clearer when I was looking at some code that defined characters on a graphic LCD the other day ;) Tubbs --- Vincent Trouilliez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 2005-09-22 at 18:00 -0700, Derric Tubbs > wrote: > > I believe the original poster said he was new to > > programming. If so, just remember that each hex > digit > > represents four binary bits/digits with decimal > values > > of 0-15. It won't take long at all to get where > > reading hex, both for decimal value and bit > pattern, > > happens without thinking about it. > > Yeah I am fairly new to C programming (only one year > epxerience, on > Microchip PIC's...and that was 5 years ago !), but > not to electronics > engineering, so I have long got the hang of Hex > notation ;-) > > > Is there some reason you can't specify your > constant > > as hex? > > It's not that I can't, it' just that in some cases, > a binary notation is > natural, and a hex one doesn't make sense. > > Typical example is when I want to define a few > custom characters for a > text LCD module. if you use a binary notation, it > actually gives you a > very convenient visual representation of each > character, since one bit > represents a pixel, and one byte represents one row > for one character. > So you can very easily define the characters, > whereas if using a hex > notation, it's a nightmare to define the characters, > and you can't check > them visually for correctness, and making > corrections is awkward. > That's just an example. > > > > On Thu, 2005-09-22 at 20:03 -0500, David Kelly > wrote: > > We may make a FreeBSD user out of you yet. > > Not a ray of hope in the current state of things ;-) > I happen to have > eventually found the perfect Linux distro for me, so > they would have to > go seriously wrong for to consider the hassle of > changing 'home' ;-) ... > > > > Joerg included a/the patch for binary constants in > the FreeBSD Ports > > version of avr-gcc, which he maintains. > > > Oh, I wonder what we would become without Joerg. > Thank you for the patch > Herr Joerg :-) > > > > If this long URL survives then it will download > the patch. You are a > > Linux user so you have lots of practice applying > patches, right? :-) > > > > > You said it, I am Linux "user", not developper !! > ;o) > I did once try to apply a patch to some program, but > I failed miserably, > both because I couldn't find anywhere on the web the > exact command line > to use, all where suggesting different options, and > also because the > source code I had didn't exactly match what the > patch was expecting. > Tried to apply the patch by hand, but the patch and > source code were so > different, I really didn't know what to do with the > patch. > > > I guess I will just take the easy route, and wait > patiently for the > patch to make it into the next stable release of > gcc-avr ;-) > > > > -- > Vince > > > > _______________________________________________ > AVR-GCC-list mailing list > AVR-GCC-list@nongnu.org > http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/avr-gcc-list > _______________________________________________ AVR-GCC-list mailing list AVR-GCC-list@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/avr-gcc-list