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Fixup app/tips
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@ -2,15 +2,8 @@
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## Generics
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Resources may appear in contexts as resource proxies or as unique references
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(`&mut-`) depending on the priority of the task. Because the same resource may
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appear as *different* types in different contexts one cannot refactor a common
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operation that uses resources into a plain function; however, such refactor is
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possible using *generics*.
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All resource proxies implement the `rtic::Mutex` trait. On the other hand,
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unique references (`&mut-`) do *not* implement this trait (due to limitations in
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the trait system) but one can wrap these references in the [`rtic::Exclusive`]
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All resource proxies implement the `rtic::Mutex` trait.
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If a resource does not implement this, one can wrap it in the [`rtic::Exclusive`]
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newtype which does implement the `Mutex` trait. With the help of this newtype
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one can write a generic function that operates on generic resources and call it
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from different tasks to perform some operation on the same set of resources.
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@ -27,15 +20,13 @@ $ cargo run --example generics
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{{#include ../../../../ci/expected/generics.run}}
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```
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Using generics also lets you change the static priorities of tasks during
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development without having to rewrite a bunch code every time.
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## Conditional compilation
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You can use conditional compilation (`#[cfg]`) on resources (the fields of
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`struct Resources`) and tasks (the `fn` items). The effect of using `#[cfg]`
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attributes is that the resource / task will *not* be available through the
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corresponding `Context` `struct` if the condition doesn't hold.
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`#[resources] struct Resources`) and tasks (the `fn` items).
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The effect of using `#[cfg]` attributes is that the resource / task
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will *not* be available through the corresponding `Context` `struct`
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if the condition doesn't hold.
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The example below logs a message whenever the `foo` task is spawned, but only if
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the program has been compiled using the `dev` profile.
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@ -132,7 +123,7 @@ You can inspect the file `rtic-expansion.rs` inside the `target` directory. This
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file contains the expansion of the `#[rtic::app]` item (not your whole program!)
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of the *last built* (via `cargo build` or `cargo check`) RTIC application. The
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expanded code is not pretty printed by default so you'll want to run `rustfmt`
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over it before you read it.
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on it before you read it.
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``` console
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$ cargo build --example foo
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