1

I'm trying to implement a custom library that I found oline. Here is the link: http://rinkydinkelectronics.com/library.php?id=80

I wanna use some of the functions to help me display the game snake with the chipKIT basic I/O shield for the UNO32 board.

I put the files

  • OLED_I2C.cpp
  • OLED_I2C.h
  • and both files inside OLED_I2C/hardware/PIC32 (since PIC32 is the hardware I have)

into the same directive where my main is. (My main is in a file called project.c)

I then tested if the library works by trying to initialize the display with it, as I've seen in the examples that come with the download. Like so:

(I removed the rest of the program and only kept the relevant parts)

#include <OLED_I2C.h>

OLED  myOLED(SDA, SCL, 8);

void setup()
{
    myOLED.begin();
}

main 
{
    setup();
}

But I got the error:

project.c:5:22: ödesdigert fel: OLED_I2C.h: No such file or directory
 #include <OLED_I2C.h>
                      ^

 (ödesdigert fel = fatal error)

Why can't it find the file, even though I put it in the same directory as my main file?

Could anyone help me understand what I'm doing wrong, or perhaps, what I've gravely misunderstood?

PS. I'm sorry I wasn't able to include library in the tags, but library alone was not an option, and I simply do not know enogh about libraries to tell for sure what type this is.

1 Answer 1

3

Change

#include <OLED_I2C.h>

to

#include "OLED_I2C.h"

Angle brackets tell the compiler to look for the file in the system PATH (an environment variable set by the operating system which contains paths to critical binaries/libraries etc). Double quotes refer to files in the current working directory.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.