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I have created the following embedded C code using codewarrior. I have modified it and cut alot out to post this example. Three files:

Main.c:

#include <NormalState.h>
#include <Temperatures.h>

struct Temp *currentTemp = createTemp();
struct Temp *minTemp = createTemp();
struct Temp *maxTemp = createTemp();
minTemp->fehrenheit = 68;
maxTemp->fehrenheit = 72;
currentTemp->fehrenheit = 70;
int i = 0;
buffer = 3;

for(;;)
{
    runNormalState();
    if(i > 10000)
    {
        if(heat == FALSE)
        {
            currentTemp->fehrenheit--;
        }
        else
        {
            currentTemp->fehrenheit++;
        }

        i = 0;
    }
    i++;
}

Temperatures.h:

struct Temp{
    float celcius;
    float fehrenheit;
    float kelvin;
};

struct Temp *createTemp()
{
    return malloc(sizeof(struct Temp));
}

NormalState.h:

#include <Temperatures.h>

byte buffer;
bool heat, cool;

void runNormalState()
{
    if(currentTemp->fehrenheit <= minTemp->fehrenheit - buffer)
    {
        heat = TRUE;
    }
    else if(currentTemp->fehrenheit >= maxTemp->fehrenheit + buffer)
    {
        cool = TRUE;
    }
}

I wrote some tests that start currentTemp->fehrenheit at 70 and deincrements it approximately every second. The if/else statement in NormalState.h checks if the heat needs to be turned on.

buffer is 3. MinTemp->fehrenheit - buffer is 65. So when currentTemp->fehrenheit drops below 65, heat should equal TRUE. However, the value never changes. Likewise, if I remove buffer from minTemp->fehrenheit - buffer from the if/else statement, so that it is just minTemp->fehrenheit, heat is always evaluated to TRUE.

I cannot for the life of me figure out what is going on here. I can say what I have discovered already through tests:

  • The if/else statement is NOT being skipped over. It is just not being evaluated.
  • I have checked the values of both currentTemp->fehrenheit and minTemp->fehrenheit. They both equal what I would expect each respective value to be at that given time.
  • It is not related to the struct data members being floats. I have the same issue if I made the data members of Temp ints, bytes, doubles, or floats.

I have a feeling this is related to some kind of fundamental misunderstanding I may have with pointers or conversions. I could also be missing something incredibly basic, but I don't know where else to turn. The other engineer here couldn't figure it out either.

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  • 2
    The name is normally Fahrenheit with an 'a', and Celsius has an 's' in the middle. That is tangential to your other problems. Mar 25, 2015 at 22:25
  • 5
    Please show us more code, in the form of an MCVE (Minimal, Complete, Verifiable Example) or SSCCE (Short, Self-Contained, Correct Example). We can't tell what is going wrong from the limited context you've given us. You can help yourself by adding printf() statements for the control variables, too. Mar 25, 2015 at 22:27
  • 2
    Another tangential comment, but is this struct really necessary anyway? Couldn't you just store the temperature in Celsius and use that everywhere in your code? You only need to do the conversions to and from Fahrenheit and Kelvin when inputting or outputting data. There's no need to keep an internal representation of all three values.
    – r3mainer
    Mar 25, 2015 at 22:33
  • 4
    You set heat = TRUE and cool = TRUE, but nowhere do you set heat = FALSE and cool = FALSE. So eventually, both will be true and will be true forever. Mar 25, 2015 at 22:50
  • 2
    Having the function defined in the header file without the inline or static keyword normally means that only one source file (translation unit or TU) in the program can include that header. Are you sure that you've done that (once in Temperatures.h and once in NormalState.h)? Also, as a general rule, headers you write go in double quotes; headers provided by 'the system' go in angle brackets (<stdio.h>, etc). Also, also: your initialization for struct Temp *currentTemp = createTemp(); and two other variables is using C++ initialization rules, not C initialization rules. What gives? Mar 25, 2015 at 23:22

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