In bare-metal or embedded programming environments, a natural kind of simple example program is one that just counts up from zero, on whatever output device you have – 7-segment display, or in binary on a row of LEDs, etc.
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In bare-metal or embedded programming environments, a natural kind of simple example program is one that just counts up from zero, on whatever output device you have – 7-segment display, or in binary on a row of LEDs, etc.
But it's quite confusing if the manual refers to it as a "counter example"!
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In bare-metal or embedded programming environments, a natural kind of simple example program is one that just counts up from zero, on whatever output device you have – 7-segment display, or in binary on a row of LEDs, etc.
But it's quite confusing if the manual refers to it as a "counter example"!
@simontatham gah, I don't like that sort of thing, I'm going to organise a counter protest!
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@simontatham gah, I don't like that sort of thing, I'm going to organise a counter protest!
@xanna when the value wraps round back to 0, that's a counter revolution.
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@xanna when the value wraps round back to 0, that's a counter revolution.
@simontatham we refer to that movement as "counter clockwise"
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