Thank you very much Martin!
I will study the input/output relationship more closely using the print
statements to arrive at a way to use the forecast method.
George
On Tue, Jul 6, 2021 at 10:12 AM Martin Luelf wrote:
> Dear George,
>
> please always reply to the mailing list (or have the list
Hi Glen,
you know how much I like that you're building great software for science and
education
based on GNU Radio, and it's exactly why (I back then, but now) we didn't let
3.7 just die.
So, I think, we really do what you wish for: GNU Radio 3.7 is still around.
Of course, old software ages;
Dear George,
please always reply to the mailing list (or have the list in CC), rather
than only to the person you are replying to. This way other people that
will find your original question in the future can benefit from the
discussion as well.
From your example I see that you are using
> On Jul 6, 2021, at 7:37 AM, Marcus Müller wrote:
>
> Hi Yasir,
>
> On 06.07.21 06:07, Yasir ABBAS wrote:
>> Hello community
>>
>> I am using Gnuradio 3.7.
>
> Please don't. GNU Radio 3.7 is our legacy release, which we only still
> maintain because
> there's existing systems based on
Hi Yasir,
On 06.07.21 06:07, Yasir ABBAS wrote:
> Hello community
>
> I am using Gnuradio 3.7.
Please don't. GNU Radio 3.7 is our legacy release, which we only still maintain
because
there's existing systems based on it.
If you're now learning GNU Radio, you should be using GNU Radio 3.9 or
Dear George,
what specifically does not work with your test? Any error messages, or
is it not producing the result you are expecting. And if so, what is
your block input, what is the output and what output are you expecting?
Keep in mind that the forecast method tells the scheduler how much