![]() formatting and otherwise - Not what you are seeing but just to say that TYQT has good and unique code - as I've seen it on Windows. code feature Start a new mbed project and enter the code of Program Example 5.4. I used another commercial product and it was awful at keeping up with a Teensy - also putty/teraterm presented issues in usage. CoolTerm for Apple OS X developers Appendix E explains how to configure. The IDE uses JAVA which isn't as well refined and buffers fill and consume RAM with aborted heaps of garbage it seemed - and PySerial can work fast another poster found - but without some proper tuning or whatever he did - it was fitful. Then you can just put the SD card in a PC and read the data. An alternative is to use the Sparkfun Openlog to store everything the Arduino prints on an SD card. Then Rob suggested that I view the hex code in CoolTerm and we. Koromix uses some refined native code for USB serial, and it wasn't so fast months back and he gave it it's own thread to keep up with the Teensy running closer to 1MByte/sec you can effectively get on USB (it can go higher but the OS/HUB etc may be a limiting factor). If the Arduino and PC are ever power cycled, or lose the serial connection, you will almost always have to go through a manual setup to start the programs and data collection. You should choose the same port you used in the Arduino IDE to program the Blink example code onto your Arduino. I could alternatively use CoolTerm to find out the name of the serial port that I was using. ![]() TYQT is awesome for raw speed and utility as I've found it. CoolTerm is a very popular cross-platform serial console application developed by Roger Meier. It handles multiple online units as individuals and many other things the IDE doesn't support. If TYQT is working - use it - At times like these having TYQT makes Teensy better as debugging and seeing/trusting the output is otherwise difficult. In fact I have to head over to the TYQT thread now as there is now a context menu applied at some effort that was missing so Teensy naming is more intuitive. It is under active development - with focus on working as it does. Testing code and motor movement using TinyG and CoolTerm with updated design. TYQT isn't magic - but if it works - your hardware is working, and it is doing something right perhaps the others are not. Emily and I tested it and it worked pretty well.
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