hey
i am using 89c51 to measuring velocity. the distance is fix. but i am unable to divide it with time which is varying. plz help me with some example of such division. let my distancce is 15cm and time will not b more than half minute. i am using oscillator of 11.0592MHz.
thanks in advance
Yes, I do think he does.
You don't seriously think that he has any intention of actually creating a real site - do you?
I understand your frustration. But it is better to have an invalid link that a valid link to pages that
I can practically guarantee no one wants to learn from someone who can't even put their OWN website address into their web browser and test it before they post the link.
If it's not live, don't post the links until it is. It's a waste of both your time and ours.
Due to a few technical difficulties beyond my control, the site is not yet 100% live.
In response to your question, I have written a new page for the up and coming live blog to be found at www.kneeltronicals.com/.../just-before-warm-horlicks
Why are you continuously pushing your fake web site? Are you planning to create such a site after having planted enough links?
Why not check out my blog at www.kneeltronicals.com/.../after-din-dins ? There's a new article.
Since you ask, blog.antronics.co.uk/.../
Google is actually quote good at finding lots of nice references for a beginning C programmer. Don't be affraid to test it. If you do not like the information you find, or find interesting material that you have trouble understanding - do come back with more specific questions and we can help out.
But don't expect web forum members to spend any real time setting together any list that will be better or similar to the lists of material that you can already quite quickly find on the net.
u plz since you gave me the idea, I will save a character by typing 'no' instead of 'yes'
actually i dont know 'C' language.... would u plz guide me about some helping material to learn 'C'?
If "easy" is your goal, why don't you just write in 'C'?
thanks
120/5 = 24. Easy to insert a decimal point between the 2 and 4 when presenting the result. Scaling the numbers like that is called fixed-point arithmetic and a way to use integers to compute even when inputs or results have decimals.
please make it more easy for me by writing some example... and also tell that how to calculate answers in decimals like 12/5=2.4.
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