Skip to content

Fix pgmspace.h link for PROGMEM again #360

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Oct 3, 2018
Merged
Changes from all commits
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions Language/Variables/Utilities/PROGMEM.adoc
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Store data in flash (program) memory instead of SRAM. There's a description of t

The `PROGMEM` keyword is a variable modifier, it should be used only with the datatypes defined in pgmspace.h. It tells the compiler "put this information into flash memory", instead of into SRAM, where it would normally go.

PROGMEM is part of the link:http://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/user-manual/group__avr__pgmspace.html[pgmspace.h] library. It is included automatically in modern versions of the IDE, however if you are using an IDE version below 1.0 (2011), you'll first need to include the library at the top your sketch, like this:
PROGMEM is part of the link:http://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/user-manual/group\__avr__pgmspace.html[pgmspace.h] library. It is included automatically in modern versions of the IDE, however if you are using an IDE version below 1.0 (2011), you'll first need to include the library at the top your sketch, like this:

`#include <avr/pgmspace.h>`
[%hardbreaks]
Expand All @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ Note that because PROGMEM is a variable modifier, there is no hard and fast rule

While `PROGMEM` could be used on a single variable, it is really only worth the fuss if you have a larger block of data that needs to be stored, which is usually easiest in an array, (or another C data structure beyond our present discussion).

Using `PROGMEM` is also a two-step procedure. After getting the data into Flash memory, it requires special methods (functions), also defined in the link:http://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/user-manual/group__avr__pgmspace.html[pgmspace.h] library, to read the data from program memory back into SRAM, so we can do something useful with it.
Using `PROGMEM` is also a two-step procedure. After getting the data into Flash memory, it requires special methods (functions), also defined in the link:http://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/user-manual/group\__avr__pgmspace.html[pgmspace.h] library, to read the data from program memory back into SRAM, so we can do something useful with it.


--
Expand Down