On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 01:51 PM, Ian Jefferson wrote:
Hi Herb & Erik,
I don't understand the significance of posting a 'release version' - I have very little experience of using Github.? I think I might have the tools to make a standalone executable, although I never thought to do that when running the programme using Python seems easy (to me).? I will consult the usual search engine and see what I can discover.
Ian,
? ? Generally speaking, code downloaded from GitHub located in the repository instead of the release section, means that the author considers it to be beta and not ready for primetime.? NanoVNA-Saver started that way and has evolved into almost a commercial strength application, but it took a lot of contributions and feedback from different sources to get there over the course of almost 3 years.?
? Ian put a lot of thought into the design of QtTinySA and leveraged some of the command console routines from Horo's tools for the tinySA. It looks to have the beginnings of developing into a very useful software application for the tinySA/tinySA Ultra.? Since QtTinySA?is a beta application, it is currently missing some useful features such as capturing the tinySA screen and exporting traces to CSV files.
? QtTinySA is surprising quick at retrieving and displaying trace data from the tinySA.? I wasn't expecting that to be true for a Python graphical application. I'm hoping forward QtTinySA? receives continued support from the open-source development community. Martin Horo has already forked a branch that supports either the tinySA or tinySA Ultra.? Ian's main branch currently only supports the tinySA Ultra.
Herb
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