301 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
301 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
The MicroPython Interactive Interpreter Mode (aka REPL)
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=======================================================
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This section covers some characteristics of the MicroPython Interactive
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Interpreter Mode. A commonly used term for this is REPL (read-eval-print-loop)
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which will be used to refer to this interactive prompt.
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Auto-indent
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-----------
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When typing python statements which end in a colon (for example if, for, while)
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then the prompt will change to three dots (...) and the cursor will be indented
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by 4 spaces. When you press return, the next line will continue at the same
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level of indentation for regular statements or an additional level of indentation
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where appropriate. If you press the backspace key then it will undo one
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level of indentation.
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If your cursor is all the way back at the beginning, pressing RETURN will then
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execute the code that you've entered. The following shows what you'd see
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after entering a for statement (the underscore shows where the cursor winds up):
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>>> for i in range(30):
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... _
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If you then enter an if statement, an additional level of indentation will be
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provided:
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>>> for i in range(30):
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... if i > 3:
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... _
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Now enter ``break`` followed by RETURN and press BACKSPACE:
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>>> for i in range(30):
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... if i > 3:
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... break
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... _
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Finally type ``print(i)``, press RETURN, press BACKSPACE and press RETURN again:
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>>> for i in range(30):
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... if i > 3:
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... break
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... print(i)
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...
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0
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1
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2
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3
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>>>
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Auto-indent won't be applied if the previous two lines were all spaces. This
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means that you can finish entering a compound statement by pressing RETURN
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twice, and then a third press will finish and execute.
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Auto-completion
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---------------
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While typing a command at the REPL, if the line typed so far corresponds to
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the beginning of the name of something, then pressing TAB will show
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possible things that could be entered. For example, first import the machine
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module by entering ``import machine`` and pressing RETURN.
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Then type ``m`` and press TAB and it should expand to ``machine``.
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Enter a dot ``.`` and press TAB again. You should see something like:
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>>> machine.
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__name__ info unique_id reset
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bootloader freq rng idle
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sleep deepsleep disable_irq enable_irq
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Pin
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The word will be expanded as much as possible until multiple possibilities exist.
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For example, type ``machine.Pin.AF3`` and press TAB and it will expand to
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``machine.Pin.AF3_TIM``. Pressing TAB a second time will show the possible
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expansions:
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>>> machine.Pin.AF3_TIM
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AF3_TIM10 AF3_TIM11 AF3_TIM8 AF3_TIM9
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>>> machine.Pin.AF3_TIM
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Interrupting a running program
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------------------------------
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You can interrupt a running program by pressing Ctrl-C. This will raise a KeyboardInterrupt
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which will bring you back to the REPL, providing your program doesn't intercept the
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KeyboardInterrupt exception.
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For example:
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>>> for i in range(1000000):
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... print(i)
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...
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0
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1
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2
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3
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...
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6466
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6467
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6468
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 2, in <module>
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KeyboardInterrupt:
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>>>
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Paste mode
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----------
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If you want to paste some code into your terminal window, the auto-indent feature
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will mess things up. For example, if you had the following python code: ::
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def foo():
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print('This is a test to show paste mode')
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print('Here is a second line')
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foo()
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and you try to paste this into the normal REPL, then you will see something like
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this:
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>>> def foo():
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... print('This is a test to show paste mode')
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... print('Here is a second line')
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... foo()
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...
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 3
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IndentationError: unexpected indent
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If you press Ctrl-E, then you will enter paste mode, which essentially turns off
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the auto-indent feature, and changes the prompt from ``>>>`` to ``===``. For example:
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>>>
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paste mode; Ctrl-C to cancel, Ctrl-D to finish
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=== def foo():
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=== print('This is a test to show paste mode')
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=== print('Here is a second line')
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=== foo()
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===
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This is a test to show paste mode
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Here is a second line
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>>>
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Paste Mode allows blank lines to be pasted. The pasted text is compiled as if
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it were a file. Pressing Ctrl-D exits paste mode and initiates the compilation.
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Soft reset
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----------
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A soft reset will reset the python interpreter, but tries not to reset the
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method by which you're connected to the MicroPython board (USB-serial, or Wifi).
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You can perform a soft reset from the REPL by pressing Ctrl-D, or from your python
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code by executing: ::
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machine.soft_reset()
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For example, if you reset your MicroPython board, and you execute a dir()
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command, you'd see something like this:
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>>> dir()
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['__name__', 'pyb']
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Now create some variables and repeat the dir() command:
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>>> i = 1
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>>> j = 23
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>>> x = 'abc'
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>>> dir()
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['j', 'x', '__name__', 'pyb', 'i']
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>>>
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Now if you enter Ctrl-D, and repeat the dir() command, you'll see that your
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variables no longer exist:
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.. code-block:: python
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MPY: sync filesystems
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MPY: soft reboot
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MicroPython v1.5-51-g6f70283-dirty on 2015-10-30; PYBv1.0 with STM32F405RG
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Type "help()" for more information.
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>>> dir()
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['__name__', 'pyb']
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>>>
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The special variable _ (underscore)
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-----------------------------------
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When you use the REPL, you may perform computations and see the results.
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MicroPython stores the results of the previous statement in the variable _ (underscore).
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So you can use the underscore to save the result in a variable. For example:
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>>> 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5
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15
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>>> x = _
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>>> x
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15
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>>>
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Raw mode and raw-paste mode
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---------------------------
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Raw mode (also called raw REPL) is not something that a person would normally use.
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It is intended for programmatic use and essentially behaves like paste mode with
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echo turned off, and with optional flow control.
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Raw mode is entered using Ctrl-A. You then send your python code, followed by
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a Ctrl-D. The Ctrl-D will be acknowledged by 'OK' and then the python code will
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be compiled and executed. Any output (or errors) will be sent back. Entering
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Ctrl-B will leave raw mode and return the the regular (aka friendly) REPL.
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Raw-paste mode is an additional mode within the raw REPL that includes flow control,
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and which compiles code as it receives it. This makes it more robust for high-speed
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transfer of code into the device, and it also uses less RAM when receiving because
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it does not need to store a verbatim copy of the code before compiling (unlike
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standard raw mode).
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Raw-paste mode uses the following protocol:
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#. Enter raw REPL as usual via ctrl-A.
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#. Write 3 bytes: ``b"\x05A\x01"`` (ie ctrl-E then "A" then ctrl-A).
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#. Read 2 bytes to determine if the device entered raw-paste mode:
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* If the result is ``b"R\x00"`` then the device understands the command but
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doesn't support raw paste.
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* If the result is ``b"R\x01"`` then the device does support raw paste and
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has entered this mode.
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* Otherwise the result should be ``b"ra"`` and the device doesn't support raw
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paste and the string ``b"w REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>"`` should be read and
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discarded.
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#. If the device is in raw-paste mode then continue, otherwise fallback to
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standard raw mode.
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#. Read 2 bytes, this is the flow control window-size-increment (in bytes)
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stored as a 16-bit unsigned little endian integer. The initial value for the
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remaining-window-size variable should be set to this number.
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#. Write out the code to the device:
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* While there are bytes to send, write up to the remaining-window-size worth
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of bytes, and decrease the remaining-window-size by the number of bytes
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written.
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* If the remaining-window-size is 0, or there is a byte waiting to read, read
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1 byte. If this byte is ``b"\x01"`` then increase the remaining-window-size
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by the window-size-increment from step 5. If this byte is ``b"\x04"`` then
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the device wants to end the data reception, and ``b"\x04"`` should be
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written to the device and no more code sent after that. (Note: if there is
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a byte waiting to be read from the device then it does not need to be read
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and acted upon immediately, the device will continue to consume incoming
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bytes as long as reamining-window-size is greater than 0.)
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#. When all code has been written to the device, write ``b"\x04"`` to indicate
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end-of-data.
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#. Read from the device until ``b"\x04"`` is received. At this point the device
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has received and compiled all of the code that was sent and is executing it.
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#. The device outputs any characters produced by the executing code. When (if)
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the code finishes ``b"\x04"`` will be output, followed by any exception that
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was uncaught, followed again by ``b"\x04"``. It then goes back to the
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standard raw REPL and outputs ``b">"``.
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For example, starting at a new line at the normal (friendly) REPL, if you write::
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b"\x01\x05A\x01print(123)\x04"
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Then the device will respond with something like::
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b"\r\nraw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>R\x01\x80\x00\x01\x04123\r\n\x04\x04>"
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Broken down over time this looks like::
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# Step 1: enter raw REPL
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write: b"\x01"
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read: b"\r\nraw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>"
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# Step 2-5: enter raw-paste mode
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write: b"\x05A\x01"
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read: b"R\x01\x80\x00\x01"
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# Step 6-8: write out code
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write: b"print(123)\x04"
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read: b"\x04"
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# Step 9: code executes and result is read
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read: b"123\r\n\x04\x04>"
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In this case the flow control window-size-increment is 128 and there are two
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windows worth of data immediately available at the start, one from the initial
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window-size-increment value and one from the explicit ``b"\x01"`` value that
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is sent. So this means up to 256 bytes can be written to begin with before
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waiting or checking for more incoming flow-control characters.
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The ``tools/pyboard.py`` program uses the raw REPL, including raw-paste mode, to
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execute Python code on a MicroPython-enabled board.
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