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authorRyan Ascheman <rascheman@groupon.com>2016-10-18 12:42:02 -0700
committerRyan Ascheman <rascheman@groupon.com>2016-10-18 12:42:02 -0700
commit55b8b8477cc6aee82dfe6792eea4e589cac433d5 (patch)
treece5bfbd1b0ee59dbffdc2044bcf90c89614392ed /tmk_core/common/chibios/printf.h
parentd1c70328f8d8ded6ce1e5422b468fc41ef315e7d (diff)
parent04df74f6360464661bcc1e6794e9fd3549084390 (diff)
Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master'
* upstream/master: (1239 commits) Update ez.c removes planck/rev3 temporarily Move hand_swap_config to ez.c, removes error for infinity Update Makefile ergodox: Update algernon's keymap to v1.9 Added VS Code dir to .gitignore Support the Pegasus Hoof controller. [Jack & Erez] Simplifies and documents TO add readme use wait_ms instead of _delay_ms add messenger init keymap Add example keymap Adding whiskey_tango_foxtrot_capslock ergodox keymap Unicode map framework. Allow unicode up to 0xFFFFF using separate mapping table CIE 1931 dim curve Apply the dim curve to the RGB output Update the Cluecard readme files Tune snake and knight intervals for Cluecard Tunable RGB light intervals ...
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+/*
+ * found at: http://www.sparetimelabs.com/tinyprintf/tinyprintf.php
+ * and: http://www.sparetimelabs.com/printfrevisited/printfrevisited.php
+ */
+
+/*
+File: printf.h
+
+Copyright (C) 2004 Kustaa Nyholm
+
+This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+This library 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 Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
+Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
+
+This library is realy just two files: 'printf.h' and 'printf.c'.
+
+They provide a simple and small (+200 loc) printf functionality to
+be used in embedded systems.
+
+I've found them so usefull in debugging that I do not bother with a
+debugger at all.
+
+They are distributed in source form, so to use them, just compile them
+into your project.
+
+Two printf variants are provided: printf and sprintf.
+
+The formats supported by this implementation are: 'd' 'u' 'c' 's' 'x' 'X'.
+
+Zero padding and field width are also supported.
+
+If the library is compiled with 'PRINTF_SUPPORT_LONG' defined then the
+long specifier is also
+supported. Note that this will pull in some long math routines (pun intended!)
+and thus make your executable noticably longer.
+
+The memory foot print of course depends on the target cpu, compiler and
+compiler options, but a rough guestimate (based on a H8S target) is about
+1.4 kB for code and some twenty 'int's and 'char's, say 60 bytes of stack space.
+Not too bad. Your milage may vary. By hacking the source code you can
+get rid of some hunred bytes, I'm sure, but personally I feel the balance of
+functionality and flexibility versus code size is close to optimal for
+many embedded systems.
+
+To use the printf you need to supply your own character output function,
+something like :
+
+ void putc ( void* p, char c)
+ {
+ while (!SERIAL_PORT_EMPTY) ;
+ SERIAL_PORT_TX_REGISTER = c;
+ }
+
+Before you can call printf you need to initialize it to use your
+character output function with something like:
+
+ init_printf(NULL,putc);
+
+Notice the 'NULL' in 'init_printf' and the parameter 'void* p' in 'putc',
+the NULL (or any pointer) you pass into the 'init_printf' will eventually be
+passed to your 'putc' routine. This allows you to pass some storage space (or
+anything realy) to the character output function, if necessary.
+This is not often needed but it was implemented like that because it made
+implementing the sprintf function so neat (look at the source code).
+
+The code is re-entrant, except for the 'init_printf' function, so it
+is safe to call it from interupts too, although this may result in mixed output.
+If you rely on re-entrancy, take care that your 'putc' function is re-entrant!
+
+The printf and sprintf functions are actually macros that translate to
+'tfp_printf' and 'tfp_sprintf'. This makes it possible
+to use them along with 'stdio.h' printf's in a single source file.
+You just need to undef the names before you include the 'stdio.h'.
+Note that these are not function like macros, so if you have variables
+or struct members with these names, things will explode in your face.
+Without variadic macros this is the best we can do to wrap these
+fucnction. If it is a problem just give up the macros and use the
+functions directly or rename them.
+
+For further details see source code.
+
+regs Kusti, 23.10.2004
+*/
+
+
+#ifndef __TFP_PRINTF__
+#define __TFP_PRINTF__
+
+#include <stdarg.h>
+
+void init_printf(void* putp,void (*putf) (void*,char));
+
+void tfp_printf(char *fmt, ...);
+void tfp_sprintf(char* s,char *fmt, ...);
+
+void tfp_format(void* putp,void (*putf) (void*,char),char *fmt, va_list va);
+
+#define printf tfp_printf
+#define sprintf tfp_sprintf
+
+#endif