On Fri, Oct 18, 2024 at 5:56 PM <karl@???> wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Oct 18, 2024 at 1:16 PM <karl@???> wrote:
> ...
> > > > Interesting that you mention this!
> > > > I have been looking at Ada - - - I really like the idea of provably correct
> > > > constructs. But - - - - when I go looking for those that have used Ada
> > > > to solve 'small' things like weather station sensors and making things
> > > > like pressure controls - - - well - - - I'm finding a huge goose egg for
> > > > numbers. If you have found some of such - - - please do advise.
> > >
> > > What does "goose egg" mean in this context ?
> > >
> > goose egg equivalency null, empty set or zero
> > (Its very old - - - back from elementary school days.)
> >
> > Sorry for the confusion
>
> No problem, always fun to find new (for me) extressions.
>
> There seems to be a directory here:
> https://www.adaic.org/ada-resources/tools-libraries
The list seems to be quite old - - - ie some projects are current as to
2014 (and they don't look like they are complete) and some of the
items appear to have been subsequently abandoned - - - it is a lot
of work keeping information source lists accurate and things do change
over time - - - even if slowly (grin!).
>
> For numbers, calculations etc. you have:
> https://sourceforge.net/projects/adablas/
Now this I was not able to find anything on adablas - - - now for
adabas - - it was quite different.
Please advise as what you meant with the url.
>
> If you have a friend who knows french, this might help,
> seems to be field bus oriented + a few simple routines
> like pid-control:
> http://slo-ist.fr/ada4autom
> git clone https://gitlab.com/ada-for-automation/ada-for-automation.git
>
This was one of the most promising sites except it seems like its been
at least sorta abandoned - - - there is noting since 2014 on the pages
and there isn't enough there to make it even somewhat straight forward
for the noob to start using things.
When it comes to PID control - - - my digging around (some time ago
but in the last year or so) it would seem that fortran just owns that corner
of the world and there is some really good information on setting up
such (like I thought seriously good information!!!).
Thanks for the assistance!!!