>
> One more thing, can anybody clarify this? it's said that sByte can
access the 256 byte-space of INTERNAL EEPROM which don't seem to be
the same thing as the EEPROM at E0 slow on which program code is
stored. If I declare
> Dim A as EEPROM Nib
> that means I use the 'external' EEPROM which is much slower. then
what happens to the fast acccess internal EEPROM, is there anyway to
use it?
> thanks in advance
>
I don't know much about sByte; I just tried to declare a variable of
that type on V5 and V6 without success. I think you can just about
forget the internal EEPROM.
So, use the external EEPROM as documented. Yes, it will be slow.
But you are using the OOPic for a thing it doesn't do well. What you
gain in object abstraction, you give up in performance.
When you think in terms of executing 300 or so lines of code per
SECOND, things like EEPROM access may not be the limiting factor.
The OOPic does well with hardware abstraction. Things like motors
and servos are easy to control. Projects that require a lot of
computation would probably be better served with a different
controller.
Richard
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