Also deprecate SpeedController in favor of motorcontrol.MotorController and
SpeedControllerGroup in favor of motorcontrol.MotorControllerGroup.
The MotorController interface is derived from the SpeedController interface
so that code such as SpeedController x = new VictorSP(1) continues to
compile (just with a warning).
SpeedControllerGroup and MotorControllerGroup are independent classes;
both implement the MotorController interface.
This enables use of types that have a no-args constructor rather than one that takes an explicit zero value.
For numeric types, value initialization will result in a zero value, so this is not a functional change.
This sensor has had zero usage for many years and was last in the KOP
over a decade ago. There are much better rotation sensors available,
and it's no longer worth maintaining this class.
- Add raw support for pose lists > 255/3 in length
- Improve drag selection, especially with closely overlapping objects
- Drag selection of corner also highlights center of object with smaller circle
- Multiple styles (box, line, closed line, track)
- Configurable line and arrow settings (color, weight)
- Add tooltip for object name, index, x, y, rotation
- Context menu for pose edit/add/remove
- View/edit in feet or inches as well as meters
- Configurable object selectability
Implementation: use vector of Pose2d internally, use units
Previously the following sequence was broken:
- Add two plot windows (creates Plot<0> and Plot<1>)
- Delete Plot<0>
- Try to create a plot window
This failed because it would try to create Plot<1>, which already existed.
It was necessary to also destroy Plot<1> before another plot could be added.
This change fixes this case by trying all 0-N cases.
Improves consistency across all classes.
Affects Preferences, LiveWindow, and CameraServer.
Old commands Scheduler::GetInstance() was not updated as this is already
deprecated.
This function relies on the behavior of snprintf returning an error value
when the buffer is too small. By default, _snprintf_s aborts on Windows
instead of returning an error value.
This caused Glass to fail when trying to print a large NT value to a string.