Probably we should make some distinction between a DiY and a project. For a project on which someone works a few months you can't ask for complete documentation, or even if you have all documentation you can't do nothing with some CAD files... not all people are using free CADs.
You can't ask from a people which is living from designing projects to show you entirely his project. As you can't force the people which are lurking the shadow on this list to not copy and sell your working projects once you have posted them, those are the facts and the truth. The code itself does not qualify the code for being a project, but a code plus a minimal documentation about "what's ABOUT" can be considered a project. From my perspective (even I didn't use Rob's library, having my own routines) that alarm clock code it's a project. (but that's also because I've read and experimented quite a lot about/with RTCC before reading that code). Vasile On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 8:12 AM, Rob Hamerling <[email protected]>wrote: > > In that case I have only sample programs! ;-) > Rob. > > > On 07/31/10 03:29 pm, funlw65 wrote: > >> And obligatory CAD files for the board used in project, full >> documentation, photos with the final project and maybe a movie with >> the running application which prove that the project was realized and >> fully tested. All required to permit the reproduction of the project. >> Not only the firmware, not matter how complex it is. >> That does not constitute a DIY project. >> >> Vasi(funlw65) >> >> On Jul 31, 12:41 am, Rob Hamerling<[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Hi guys, >>> >>> Do we have criteria to decide if a program qualifies as sample or as >>> project? I can think of the following criteria: >>> - filesize >>> - number of lines of code >>> - amount and quality of 'learning' information >>> - number of used libraries >>> - complexity of the code >>> - general purpose or very specific application >>> - is it the only program using a specific library >>> Not all of these are easy to define.... >>> >>> Reason to ask: my alarm_clock project is pretty large, but not very >>> complex and reasonably documented (in the form of comments in the >>> source). I decided to put it in 'projects', but it might as well be a >>> sample, because it is currently the only program using the new >>> rtc_hardware library. >>> >>> Regards, Rob. >>> >>> -- >>> Rob Hamerling, Vianen, NL (http://www.robh.nl/) >>> >> >> > -- > Rob Hamerling, Vianen, NL (http://www.robh.nl/) > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "jallib" group. > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > [email protected]<jallib%[email protected]> > . > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/jallib?hl=en. > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "jallib" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jallib?hl=en.
