Andy Ross wrote:
Erik Hofman wrote:
There is a compiler directive:
#if BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
#else
#endif
I've never heard of this one. Is it a standard thing, or a common
extension?
It should be supported by all compilers.
It works fine under my copy of gcc, but oddly it does *not* appear
Erik Hofman writes:
Andy Ross wrote:
Erik Hofman wrote:
There is a compiler directive:
#if BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
#else
#endif
I've never heard of this one. Is it a standard thing, or a common
extension?
It should be supported by all compilers.
It works fine
Norman Vine wrote:
Erik Hofman writes:
Andy Ross wrote:
Very strange. Does this work on all our platforms? If so, we can
call this case closed. I'd really appreciate a link to appropriate
documentation, though, if you have it. :)
I don't have documentation, I found it in another project. But
Andy Ross writes:
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
I believe that plib has some endiannes tests. Also simgear, have a
look at simgear/io/lowlevel.hxx (towards the end)
Right. But those are runtime tests. What Nasal needs to modify is a
structure order, which can only be done at compile time.
On Sun, 23 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
On 11/23/03 at 6:09 PM Jon Stockill wrote:
There's a few pictures of the progress I've been making here:
http://flightgear.stockill.org.uk/scenery/
Wow, that's fantastic. Can I nag you to sent the updated taxiways to Robin
Peel when you've
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
But i noticed by using the current CVS version, that
the engines where off after pressing the reset button in the fg menu.
Yes, reset and save/restore are a bit broken in FlightGear right now. I'll
try to fix them when I have a chance, but it will require a bit of
Hi Guys
I am obviously missing something here.
I have downloaded David's Taxidraw and managed to get
the information into the runways.dat file.But how does that
tie into the airport scenery file.
The airport I am working on has three runways in FG.Yet in the
runways.dat file only two show.
So what
David Megginson writes:
Yes, reset and save/restore are a bit broken in FlightGear right now. I'll
try to fix them when I have a chance, but it will require a bit of
refactoring (removing Curt's initial-state stuff, for example).
I definitely need the functionality to set up various initial
Curtis L. Olson writes:
David Megginson writes:
Yes, reset and save/restore are a bit broken in FlightGear right now. I'll
try to fix them when I have a chance, but it will require a bit of
refactoring (removing Curt's initial-state stuff, for example).
I definitely need the
Norman Vine writes:
Curtis L. Olson writes:
David Megginson writes:
Yes, reset and save/restore are a bit broken in FlightGear right now. I'll
try to fix them when I have a chance, but it will require a bit of
refactoring (removing Curt's initial-state stuff, for example).
I
On 11/24/03 at 10:40 PM Innis Cunningham wrote:
Hi Guys
I am obviously missing something here.
I have downloaded David's Taxidraw and managed to get
the information into the runways.dat file.But how does that
tie into the airport scenery file.
The airport I am working on has three runways in
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
I definitely need the functionality to set up various initial
positions; in the air, on the ground, relative to different objects,
different headings, initial velocity, etc. etc.
We can accomplish the same thing simply by saving a copy of part or all of
the property tree
On 11/23/03 at 6:09 PM Jon Stockill wrote:
There's a few pictures of the progress I've been making here:
http://flightgear.stockill.org.uk/scenery/
Taxidraw is proving rather useful (thanks David), but I've spotted
something slightly odd - I'm unsure if it's the source data, or genapts,
David,
I've been playing with your logging system (/logging/log/etc. in the
property tree) and it is very slick. Good work. :-) It's very
convenient for setting up the fields you want to log and the rate and
dumping out to a file. I added an fg_command wrapper so I could set
up the fields from
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
We can accomplish the same thing simply by saving a copy of part or all of
the property tree and then reverting to it, without creating a separate,
parallel hierarchy of properties for initial conditions.
In this scheme, how would you specify initial conditions? You'd
I've put another new version up at:
www.nottingham.ac.uk/~eazdluf/TaxiDraw-0p0p4-preAlpha-w32bin.zip
- Windows Binary (statically linked) [279K]
www.nottingham.ac.uk/~eazdluf/TaxiDraw-0p0p4-preAlpha-src.tar.gz
- source and makefile for Linux [44K], requires wxGTK-dev.
Summary of changes from
David Megginson writes:
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
We can accomplish the same thing simply by saving a copy of part or all of
the property tree and then reverting to it, without creating a separate,
parallel hierarchy of properties for initial conditions.
In this scheme, how would you
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 09:27:04 -0600
Curtis L. Olson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David,
Now I'm imagining a script that sets up all the initial conditions
(altitude, speed, pressure, temp, etc.) as well as specfic logging
fields, flies an FAA certification test, logs the results, and graphs
the
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
I've put another new version up at:
I didn't even get chance to compile the last one!
--
Jon Stockill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
Flightgear-devel mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
Could this be a gotcha with how the heading is specified in runways.dat eg
54.64 vs 234.64?
Probably - I hadn't really investigated - I just noticed it when taking
the screenshots, and was going to try and track it down tonight.
--
Jon Stockill
[EMAIL
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, Jon Stockill wrote:
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
I've put another new version up at:
I didn't even get chance to compile the last one!
This one doesn't seem to want to compile though - I just checked 0.0.3
just to make sure I'd not broken something on my
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
Sure, I agree with your description of the specific case of a reset.
But we also need to consider starting up at new places with new
initial conditions, initiating a ground or air trim, etc. etc. It
seems to me that we would be abusing the save/restore analogy in that
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
If the sim is running, wouldn't you be competing with the FDM?
Wouldn't it be cleaner to keep a separate area for initial conditions
so you can specify them at your leisure, and then commit when you
are ready? Otherwise if we are writing into the main property tree,
it
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, Jon Stockill wrote:
This one doesn't seem to want to compile though - I just checked 0.0.3
just to make sure I'd not broken something on my system and that compiled
ok - I get this with 0.0.4 though:
It looks like your compiler doesn't like fabs(int) (unsurprisingly!) - I've
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, Jon Stockill wrote:
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
Could this be a gotcha with how the heading is specified in runways.dat eg
54.64 vs 234.64?
Probably - I hadn't really investigated - I just noticed it when taking
the screenshots, and was going to try and
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003, David Luff wrote:
It looks like your compiler doesn't like fabs(int) (unsurprisingly!) - I've
changed it to abs and put the replacement source up at the same location.
Let me know if it compiles now please.
Yeah, that's fine now.
--
Jon Stockill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
David Megginson [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Curtis L. Olson wrote:
If the sim is running, wouldn't you be competing with the FDM?
Wouldn't it be cleaner to keep a separate area for initial conditions
so you can specify them at your leisure, and then commit when you
are ready? Otherwise if
Reading Eric Raymond's excellent new book, The Art of Unix Programming,
reminded me of the importance of programs staying quiet unless (a) they have
something critically important to say (i.e. help, I'm about to die), or
(b) the caller explicit asks them to be noisy.
Of all the programs I
David Megginson wrote:
I've just checked in a few changes to start cutting down the noise:
No! But... but... if you do this, then no one will remember that the
default type for a panel layer is texture, or that bindings are read
during initialization. Just think what will happen when everyone
Andy Ross wrote:
1. The default log level is now FG_ALERT, or at least, it's supposed
to be (though some FG_WARN messages inexplicably still get
through).
What about the presumptively useful stuff like the JSBSim touchdown
report or YASim solution data? Would it be a good idea to split out
Here's another fun landing:
http://www.megginson.com/flightsim/water-tower.jpg
The hard part, for me, is watching the ground close to the helicopter when
I'm close to the hover. In real life, when I'm flaring for a landing, I'm
usually focussing on the far end of the runway, perhaps a mile or
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 13:49:58 -0500
David Megginson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Andy Ross wrote:
1. The default log level is now FG_ALERT, or at least, it's supposed
to be (though some FG_WARN messages inexplicably still get
through).
What about the presumptively useful stuff like the JSBSim
David Megginson writes:
Jim Wilson wrote:
FWIW I'm not that crazy about switching aircraft mid flight, but I suppose it
could be done easily enough. Anyone for a piper cub going 270kias @ 4ft?
That sounds great. Can you animate the fabric tearing off the wings?
Sounds like a
David Megginson [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Here's another fun landing:
http://www.megginson.com/flightsim/water-tower.jpg
The hard part, for me, is watching the ground close to the helicopter when
I'm close to the hover. In real life, when I'm flaring for a landing, I'm
usually focussing
David Megginson [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Jim Wilson wrote:
FWIW I'm not that crazy about switching aircraft mid flight, but I suppose it
could be done easily enough. Anyone for a piper cub going 270kias @ 4ft?
That sounds great. Can you animate the fabric tearing off the wings?
David Megginson wrote:
I'm controlling the (simulated) bo105 helicopter much better by
picking an airspeed (say, 10 kt when maneuvering for a landing) and
holding it as closely as possible with the cyclic.
Out of curiosity, how do pilots do this in real helicopters? I
wouldn't think a
David Megginson wrote:
Reading Eric Raymond's excellent new book, The Art of Unix Programming,
reminded me of the importance of programs staying quiet unless (a) they
have something critically important to say (i.e. help, I'm about to
die), or (b) the caller explicit asks them to be noisy.
Of
Andy Ross wrote:
Out of curiosity, how do pilots do this in real helicopters? I
wouldn't think a traditional ASI would work very well at 10 kts...
You could probably build one that did -- after all, the aenemometers that
weather stations use can register down to less than 5 kt. Still, I'm
* David Megginson -- Monday 24 November 2003 19:42:
The hard part, for me, is watching the ground close to the helicopter when
I'm close to the hover. In real life, when I'm flaring for a landing, I'm
usually focussing on the far end of the runway, perhaps a mile or more away;
in a
Melchior FRANZ wrote:
Before you get too accustomed to the current fgfs bo105, there's
a little detail that I got wrong: Tthe pilot sits at the right
side in a real bo. :-)
Yes, I know -- I thought about editing the config file, but didn't get
around to it (at least not yet).
All the best,
Out of curiosity, how do pilots do this in real helicopters? I
wouldn't think a traditional ASI would work very well at 10 kts...
You could probably build one that did -- after all, the aenemometers that
weather stations use can register down to less than 5 kt. Still, I'm
guessing that
David Megginson [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Andy Ross wrote:
Out of curiosity, how do pilots do this in real helicopters? I
wouldn't think a traditional ASI would work very well at 10 kts...
You could probably build one that did -- after all, the aenemometers that
weather stations use
* Jim Wilson -- Monday 24 November 2003 23:25:
The ground effect needs to be modeled to do that correctly, doesn't it? Also
the rolling tendency in translational lift is missing.
Here is a list of things that Maik hasn't implemented yet:
Melchior FRANZ wrote:
* David Megginson -- Monday 24 November 2003 19:42:
The hard part, for me, is watching the ground close to the helicopter when
I'm close to the hover. In real life, when I'm flaring for a landing, I'm
usually focussing on the far end of the runway, perhaps a mile or
Hi,
I am having the same make error that Richard Hornby
reported in October. I am running Cygwin on XP, not
Linux. I am a graduate student who would like to
download the FlightGear source code with the hopes of
extending it to test aircraft control algorithms I
have been designing.
I followed
On 11/24/03 at 4:13 PM James Cataldo wrote:
Hi,
I am having the same make error that Richard Hornby
reported in October. I am running Cygwin on XP, not
...
test-up.o -lsgmath -lsgdebug -lpli
bsg -lplibul
/usr/lib/gcc-lib/i686-pc-cygwin/3.3.1/../../../../i686-pc-cygwin/bin/ld:
cannot
find
Check it out:
http://www.simpits.org/~geneb/727cpt.html
We're talking _dirt_ cheap here. Curt, it's probably local to you -
Minnesota U. has it.
They really need it gone so you'll get a good deal. It's begging for a
FlightGear interface! :)
g.
Many FlightGear constellations have the wrong shapes; in particular
Orion's belt has the shape of a V rather than a straight line! It
seems that whoever built your star database (the data/Astro/stars file
in CVS) made the error of applying a negative sign only to the units,
and not the fractions,
David Luff writes
On 11/24/03 at 10:40 PM Innis Cunningham wrote:
The airport I am working on has three runways in FG.Yet in the
runways.dat file only two show.
Which airport?
YPPH Perth Western Australia.The runways.dat file only shows the two
main runways 03 06.11 the light A/C runway is
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