Feedback wanted: conditional GCode without indentation
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Having come from a Delphi programming background (based on pascal) I'd be inclined to lean towards a similar syntax
Pascal was designed to be easy to read/teach.
Blocks are typically surrounded by begin/end and use the keyword "do"
Indentation is not required but usually used for clarity.while iterations < 10 do begin // do stuff end
For if statements
if move.axes[0].homed do begin echo "axis homed" end else begin echo "axis is not homed" end
line ends are usually terminated with a semi colon ; except in nested begin/end blocks as if if else (the outer block must have a ; and the inner must not) but I don't think that is necessary here.
Likewise the do keyword is purely for human readability.I would not allow mixing of indentation and whatever block format is chosen.
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I don't see the need for a begin keyword. If is the keyword that starts the block.
Perhaps if a keyword is required at the beginning, we could borrow some LUA parlance and use
THEN
, so that the parser knows when the conditional is over. -
Iām going to break with the group. I like the Python style of programming and keeping the indentations. Python is widely used and when writing code on the SBC, most likely a raspberry pi, Python is the natural choice.
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@dbruce-ae05 said in Feedback wanted: conditional GCode without indentation:
Iām going to break with the group. I like the Python style of programming and keeping the indentations. Python is widely used and when writing code on the SBC, most likely a raspberry pi, Python is the natural choice.
You're forgiven your errant ways.
Frederick
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@bot said in Feedback wanted: conditional GCode without indentation:
I don't see the need for a begin keyword. If is the keyword that starts the block.
Perhaps if a keyword is required at the beginning, we could borrow some LUA parlance and use
THEN
, so that the parser knows when the conditional is over.Well in Delphi if you only have one statement after the condition you don't need the begin/end pair. You use them when you have more than one statement.
I always thought that NOT always requiring begin/end even for one statement was a mistake.
Frederick
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@DaveA As a C & C++ programmer from around 1976 I'd love to see the Kernighan and Ritchie style with { } syntax. I hate Python indention style.
Just my opinion since you asked.What? But python style works great in editors like EMACS! Fancy IDE's highlighting { } groupings is for schmucks right?
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My opinion: use a keyword to end blocks (
end
is fine for me, but honestly I don't care).Do not allow mixing styles, use block end keywords exclusively (but allow indentation for style purposes).
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@wilriker said in Feedback wanted: conditional GCode without indentation:
My opinion: use a keyword to end blocks (
end
is fine for me, but honestly I don't care).So you would be ok with "ruvineckerned" or "footguratunnie"?
Just checking to be sure.
Frederick
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@wilriker +1
The target audience for this language is not skilled programmers. Its designers & makers that are trying to solve some problem with their printer. There is going to be a LOT of copy/paste code that mixes indentation types (tabs, spaces, number of spaces). Begin/end constructs survive this kind of abuse better than Python style strict indentation. Having just 1-way-to-do-it makes its safer/easier for newbies copying code.
The few of us that are writing most of the code can use whatever construct you come up with.
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I think php might be a good example here as it allows two types of syntax.
For pure php
<?php if ($a > $b) { // do somehting } else { // do somehting else } ?>
For php mixed with large chunks of something else like html, JS etc.
<?php if ($a > $b) : ?> // do somehting <?php else: ?> // do somehting else <?php endif; ?>
All standard control structures have the second alternative syntax.
The parser knows php is only contained between the opening and closing tags
<?php // some code here ?>
The alternate control structures lets the parser know that logic spans multiple sets of opening and closing tags.
Each control structure has it's own unique opening and closing tags.
here is a quick little tutorial with examples.
https://riptutorial.com/php/topic/1199/alternative-syntax-for-control-structures -
One thought I guess as is how any start/end construct might be interpreted by common slicers if used in start gcode etc
Prusa slicer uses if-endif so is definitely going to try to post process that. Whether it causes any issues probably depends on how PS handles things it doesn't understand -
I agree that styles shouldn't be mixed and that RRF should either support one thing or another (and not both.) However, RRF 3 is a released product, so any change could be breaking a LOT of code, macros, etc.
Even the initial "conditional gcode" stuff in RRF3 was done in such a way to not break any existing gcode.
For that reason, I still think there are ways to solve the actual problem without breaking changes to the language. One idea I proposed above, though I don't know if that would actually work. Immediately after, someone else proposed something else that wouldn't break any existing gcode.
Breaking an existing programming language for single special cases isn't a good practice. Even large functional changes should be careful to not break existing code. I still have old K&R style C code that still compiles with a modern C/C++ compiler!
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Suppose you generate a GCode file using a slicer. But you have a belt printer and you want to print it 10 times, with a belt movement between each iteration.
For this particular case, could it not be solved using a loop Gcode as in CNC or plasma cutting? In the case of Hypertherm controllers they use G97 & G98 to define the loop.
In my day job I sell CNC plasma systems and the nesting program would output thusly if you used step and repeat.
I would have thought that instead of stepping on Y, you'd just do Z?% G21 G91 G97 T10; loop 10 times N1 M00 G00X0.Y45.278 (Seq 1 - square) G41 M07 ; torch on G01Y4.722 G01X50. G01Y-50. G01X-50. G01Y45.278 M08 ; torch off G40 G00X0.Y104.722 ; move to be ready for next part G98 ; Repeat at G97 point M30 ; end of program %
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@OwenD I'd have thought, for that particular use case, one would simply advance the belt, reset the Y position using G92, then start the next print. To expand on that, when a print finishes, move the belt (say) 200mm. At that point the Y position would be (say) -250. So simply use G92 Y50 to reset it to 50, then start the next print. It's a little more complicated because the starting Y position, before the 200mm move would differ with each print, but it wouldn't be beyond the wit of man to subtract (say) 200mm from whatever the end point becomes.
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@dc42 I'd like to see indentation not have semantic meaning, mainly because the way it is now, I can't have a macro write a macro that writes a macro with conditionals in it. Believe it or not, I have a use for that. and this won't work:
M560 P"/macros/Outer"
M28 "/macros/Inner"
if condition
; stuff
M29
<!-- **EoF ** -->(Ironically, the forum software eats my leading spaces and won't let me put in a tab! So ; stuff is supposed to be indented.)
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@donstauffer put your code in a block starting and ending with triple back ticks ( ```) on a single line each to retain spaces.
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I haven't read all the replies so here's my 2 cent.
I like to keep indentation (with TAB) for readability.
There's already the break keyword for IF/ELIF constructs, why not use this generally to end IF statements?
Then end would be exclusively for WHILE-loops.Putting while loops in start/end code of a slicer could lead to conflicts when a print was cancelled.
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