Clyne f89c980176 | 2 years ago | |
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day1 | 2 years ago | |
day2 | 2 years ago | |
day3 | 2 years ago | |
day4 | 2 years ago | |
day5 | 2 years ago | |
year2020/day1 | 2 years ago | |
year2021 | 2 years ago | |
.gitignore | 3 years ago | |
LICENSE | 3 years ago | |
README.md | 2 years ago |
README.md
Advent of Code 2022
This year, I plan to complete as many days as possible on my Apple ][ GS using Applesoft BASIC. I've devised a system to transfer code and input data to and from the Apple, so all of my code is typed and tested on the machine itself.
Day 5 (Supply Stacks) has my first well-done visualization. I'm hoping to do more in the future as long as the challenge's complexity (and my time) allows.
Notes
The Apple communicates with my primary computer over a serial connection with its modem (see ADTPro's guide. The modem can run at up to 19,200 baud, which is what I configure it for. I also configure it to add newlines after carriage returns (Apple line endings are only \r
) and use buffering.
On my main computer, I configure the serial port through minicom
: 19,200 baud and hardware flow control. For some reason, I also need to configure for 7-bit characters even through the Apple is supposedly set for 8-bit. Not sure what's up there.
I use an ADTPro floppy to load BASIC, then swap for a general floppy to store my input data and programs. Running PR#2
on the Apple will direct output to the modem, allowing me to LIST
my finished programs into a minicom
capture. Through a custom BASIC program I named SERIN
, the Apple will read data from the modem and write it to a file; this is how I get my input data. SERIN
writes the input file with PRINT
statements, which sticks carriage returns between every byte. After writing this, I may have realized how to fix that.
In the future, I will add more notes here on my setup and learned techniques. I'll also add the script for SERIN
.