21 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
21 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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zotero-key: 7E6L4MG4
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zt-attachments:
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- "545"
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citekey: Gcode2023
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aliases:
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- G-code
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---
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up:: [[zotero literature notes]]
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link:: [Zotero](zotero://select/library/items/7E6L4MG4) [attachment](file:///Users/oscarplaisant/Zotero/storage/3JTC97YD/G-code.html)
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#s/PKM #zotero #t/source
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> [!zotero]+ <span style="color: #2ea8e5; --link-external-color: #2ea8e5;">[G-code](zotero://select/library/items/7E6L4MG4) - [Page ](zotero://open-pdf/library/items/3JTC97YD?annotation=2PZLUSDX)</span>
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> G-code (also RS-274) is the most widely used computer numerical control (CNC) and 3D printing programming language. It is used mainly in computer-aided manufacturing to control automated machine tools, as well as for 3D-printer slicer applications. The G stands for geometry. G-code has many variants.
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> ^2PZLUSDXa3JTC97YD
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> [!zotero]+ <span style="color: #ffd400; --link-external-color: #ffd400;">[G-code](zotero://select/library/items/7E6L4MG4) - [Page ](zotero://open-pdf/library/items/3JTC97YD?annotation=RSS52UR2)</span>
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> G-code began as a limited language that lacked constructs such as loops, conditional operators, and programmer-declared variables with natural-word-including names (or the expressions in which to use them). It was unable to encode logic but was just a way to "connect the dots" where the programmer figured out many of the dots' locations longhand.
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> ^RSS52UR2a3JTC97YD
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