As one datapoint ... I use LightBlue -- on MacOS and iOS for initial testing. Depending on the app, I also make heavy use of the MyNewt Sensor Reader app for Mac OS X and iOS, but mostly that's because I wrote them. :-)
dg > On Feb 6, 2017, at 8:57 PM, Sam Lewis <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi all, > > Apologies if this has been asked before but I searched and couldn't find > anything. > > For those of you who write mynewt Bluetooth applications, what is your > development test set up and development workflow? > > Do you test your Bluetooth interface by using a Bluetooth adaptor from your > development laptop/PC? Do you write scripts or use a generic testing > application? Do you use your smartphone to interact with the Bluetooth > interface? Or do you have a proper test rig test up? > > I'm guessing that most BLE applications eventually run against a smartphone > app but for rapid development it doesn't seem that productive if I'm having > to constantly recompile an app to test if my BLE interface is working as > expected. > > Would be very interested in hearing productive workflows that people are > using. > > Sam -- David G. Simmons (919) 534-5099 Web <https://davidgs.com/> • Blog <https://davidgs.com/davidgs_blog> • Linkedin <http://linkedin.com/in/davidgsimmons> • Twitter <http://twitter.com/TechEvangelist1> • GitHub <http://github.com/davidgs> /** Message digitally signed for security and authenticity. * If you cannot read the PGP.sig attachment, please go to * http://www.gnupg.com/ <http://www.gnupg.com/> Secure your email!!! * Public key available at keyserver.pgp.com <http://keyserver.pgp.com/> **/ ♺ This email uses 100% recycled electrons. Don't blow it by printing! There are only 2 hard things in computer science: Cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors.
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