Mercurial > public > ostc4
view wiki/Original HELP page.md @ 1007:65d35e66efb9 GasConsumption
Improve compass calibration dialog:
The previous calibration dialog showed some "magic" numbers and a 60 second count down. The new version is trying to guide the user through the calibration process: first rotate pitch, then roll and at last yaw angle. A step to the next angle is taken when enough data per angle is collected (change from red to green). To enable the yaw visualization a simple calibration is done while rotating the axis.
The function behind the calibration was not modified => the suggested process can be ignored and the same handling as the with old dialog may be applied. With the new process the dialog may be left early. Anyhow it will still be left after 60 seconds and the fine calibration is performed in the same way as before.
| author | Ideenmodellierer |
|---|---|
| date | Mon, 05 May 2025 21:02:34 +0200 |
| parents | 5f11787b4f42 |
| children |
line wrap: on
line source
# Welcome Welcome to your wiki! This is the default page we've installed for your convenience. Go ahead and edit it. ## Wiki features This wiki uses the [Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) syntax. The [MarkDownDemo tutorial](https://bitbucket.org/tutorials/markdowndemo) shows how various elements are rendered. The [Bitbucket documentation](https://confluence.atlassian.com/x/FA4zDQ) has more information about using a wiki. The wiki itself is actually a mercurial repository, which means you can clone it, edit it locally/offline, add images or any other file type, and push it back to us. It will be live immediately. Go ahead and try: ``` $ hg clone https://JeanDo@bitbucket.org/JeanDo/ostc4/wiki ``` Wiki pages are normal files, with the .md extension. You can edit them locally, as well as creating new ones. ## Syntax highlighting You can also highlight snippets of text (we use the excellent [Pygments][] library). [Pygments]: http://pygments.org/ Here's an example of some Python code: ``` #!python def wiki_rocks(text): formatter = lambda t: "funky"+t return formatter(text) ``` You can check out the source of this page to see how that's done, and make sure to bookmark [the vast library of Pygment lexers][lexers], we accept the 'short name' or the 'mimetype' of anything in there. [lexers]: http://pygments.org/docs/lexers/ Have fun!
