nanoprintf
esp32-doom
nanoprintf | esp32-doom | |
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5 | 13 | |
577 | 179 | |
- | 3.4% | |
5.2 | 0.0 | |
14 days ago | 10 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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nanoprintf
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nanoprintf VS callback_printf - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 16 Aug 2023
- Nanoprintf – The smallest public printf implementation for its feature set
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DOOM! on the #emfcamp TiDAL badge
It turns out that DOOM expects a little more POSIX compliance from it's C library than Micropython provides, in particular the printf implementation is lacking many features. The good part is that because I'm building an entirely separate binary application, I can use someone elses printf, and finally, after a lot of pain, it runs!
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Actual Challenges Faced In Software
You might be interested in this or similar: https://github.com/charlesnicholson/nanoprintf
- Nanoprintf v0.1.0 Released, drop-in [v]snprintf
esp32-doom
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Doomscroller.xyz
Since it looks to be built on the ESP32 platform, the answer is likely yes (but you'd need a display...) https://github.com/espressif/esp32-doom
I think actually there are a couple of DOOM ports for the platform.
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M5Stack Cardputer – A $30 card-sized ESP32-S3 computer with display and keyboard
My most pressing question is, can it play Doom?
There seems to be a port for ESP32 [0] and Arduino Nano does play it [1], so maybe?
[0]: https://github.com/espressif/esp32-doom
[1]: https://m5stack.hackster.io/naveenbskumar/yes-arduino-nano-e...
- Doom on CyberPi
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Just picked these up from sams club, I will try to get Doom running on it
Perhaps try this: https://github.com/espressif/esp32-doom
- Request Tutorial on loading DOOM on ESP32!
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T-Watch-Keyboard-C3: a device that looks like a miniature PC replica comprised of an ESP32-C3 powered keyboard, and the TTGO T-Watch ESP32 programmable device with a 1.54-inch touchscreen display
should be fine, yeah
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DOOM! on the #emfcamp TiDAL badge
There is a port of DOOM for an ESP32, proving that it can be done, however I have added additional constraints on myself as follows:
- Update on my WiFi Game Boy cartridge: It can now stream video. (ESP8266)
- hey i am planning to do doom on arduino but my file is not supported, if anyone here knows anything about an arduino compatible doom file please let me know
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Neil's Technical Review: How I hacked an office telephone to play DOOM
Now all we need for DOOM everywhere is to make the memory management more portable. It's still difficult to port DOOM to microcontrollers like the ESP32 and ARM Cortex-M and RISC-V, which are easily fast enough to run it but which have much less RAM than a 90's PC (128-512K vs 4MB). But they can use external RAM via SPI which is very cheap for 4 or 8 MB, and while that is slower than 90's DRAM because of the serial protocol it should be good enough with a very simple cacheing strategy?
What are some alternatives?
printf - Tiny, fast, non-dependent and fully loaded printf implementation for embedded systems. Extensive test suite passing.
doomgeneric - Easily portable doom
defmt - Efficient, deferred formatting for logging on embedded systems
doom-nano - A 3d raycast engine for Arduino
printf - Tiny, fast(ish), self-contained, fully loaded printf, sprinf etc. implementation; particularly useful in embedded systems.
st7789_mpy - Fast MicroPython driver for ST7789 display module written in C
wifi-game-boy-cartridge - A WiFi cartridge for the original Game Boy.
lfbb - A Lock Free Bipartite Buffer Library written in standard C11
doom-tidal - DOOM for the #emfcamp TiDAL badge :)
esp-idf - Espressif IoT Development Framework. Official development framework for Espressif SoCs.