GNU Octave is a high-level interpreted language, primarily intended for numerical computations.
(via GNU Octave)
Hint: I also mad an octave docset for Dash: https://github.com/obstschale/octave-docset
| import sys # import sys | |
| sys.path.insert(1, "./lib") # add the lib folder to sys so python can find the libraries | |
| import epd2in7b # import the display drivers | |
| from PIL import Image,ImageDraw,ImageFont # import the image libraries | |
| import time | |
| from gpiozero import Button # import the Button control from gpiozero | |
| btn1 = Button(5) # assign each button to a variable | |
| btn2 = Button(6) # by passing in the pin number |
| #!/bin/sh | |
| # This is a skeleton of a bash daemon. To use for yourself, just set the | |
| # daemonName variable and then enter in the commands to run in the doCommands | |
| # function. Modify the variables just below to fit your preference. | |
| daemonName="DAEMON-NAME" | |
| pidDir="." | |
| pidFile="$pidDir/$daemonName.pid" |
GNU Octave is a high-level interpreted language, primarily intended for numerical computations.
(via GNU Octave)
Hint: I also mad an octave docset for Dash: https://github.com/obstschale/octave-docset
Look at LSB init scripts for more information.
Copy to /etc/init.d:
# replace "$YOUR_SERVICE_NAME" with your service's name (whenever it's not enough obvious)