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
andminTemp->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.
printf()
statements for the control variables, too.heat = TRUE
andcool = TRUE
, but nowhere do you setheat = FALSE
andcool = FALSE
. So eventually, both will be true and will be true forever.inline
orstatic
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 inTemperatures.h
and once inNormalState.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 forstruct Temp *currentTemp = createTemp();
and two other variables is using C++ initialization rules, not C initialization rules. What gives?