Ultimaker / Cura

3D printer / slicing GUI built on top of the Uranium framework
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0
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Cannot Save end g-code in Cura 5.0 #12689

Closed oliverhbailey closed 2 years ago

oliverhbailey commented 2 years ago

Application Version

5.0.0

Platform

Windows 10 Build 19044

Printer

Creality CR10 Smart

Reproduction steps

Open Settings -> Printer Maintenance Change ending Y Position from 300 to 285 Close Printer Maintenance dialog Close Printer Dialog Cannot slice because change was not detected or saved

Actual results

Noting - Changes were not and cannot be saved.

Expected results

New end g-code position should be 285, value stays at 300

Checklist of files to include

Additional information & file uploads

Have tried repeatedly to make a change without success.

GregValiant commented 2 years ago

This started when the dialog boxes were re-configured for Qt6. As a workaround, after you have made changes to either the StartUp Gcode or to the Ending Gcode, click in the opposite textbox before closing the dialog. That should set the altered contents. This is a duplicate of #12422 and should have been fixed in the 5.1Beta but it appears that it has not.

nallath commented 2 years ago

This is a duplicate of https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12422 and should have been fixed in the 5.1Beta but it appears that it has not.

The ticket was reported for 5.0, not 5.1.

So please re-test this for 5.1 beta :)

oliverhbailey commented 2 years ago

Actually one of the other developers sent a messsgevit is not fixed in 5.1 beta. He provided a work around that does work.

I will not respond to your comments because you response confirms my comments. And my comments from 50 years of experience. If all you have to say was "congradulations", you missed every point made. Thank you.

Oliver Bailey

On Thu, Jul 7, 2022, 9:07 AM Jaime van Kessel @.***> wrote:

Closed #12689 https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12689 as completed.

— Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12689#event-6952190771, or unsubscribe https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AD6CBIF46NGA5QRASFBMOSTVS3QDHANCNFSM523O7VZQ . You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message ID: @.***>

oliverhbailey commented 2 years ago

Thank you. That work around takes temporary care of the problem.

Regards, Oliver Bailey

On Wed, Jul 6, 2022, 7:29 PM GregValiant @.***> wrote:

This started when the dialog boxes were re-configured for Qt6. As a workaround, after you have made changes to either the StartUp Gcode or to the Ending Gcode, click in the opposite textbox before closing the dialog. That should set the altered contents. This is a duplicate of #12422 https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12422 and should have been fixed in the 5.1Beta but it appears that it has not.

— Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12689#issuecomment-1176886119, or unsubscribe https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AD6CBIFZTSQPRHSBFAXICBDVSYQE5ANCNFSM523O7VZQ . You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message ID: @.***>

GregValiant commented 2 years ago

@oliverhbailey 50+ years ago I was learning to program analog computers. Then we got an IBM 360. It filled a very large room with 10 or 12 cabinets. Anyone who opened the door to the room and let the air-conditioning out was promptly flogged. The hard discs were 36" in diameter and each had a capacity of 720k. The punch cards were a huge improvement.

That was the end of my formal software training. I'm a fair ME though and necessarily big on workarounds since nothing ever seems to fit as it's supposed to. The boys and girls at Ultimaker along with the main contributors will get out their BFH's and beat this thing into shape so it's more user friendly. I think the constant changes in the world of computing (and all the feature requests) keeps getting in the way. I would think that having to port the program to about 5 different operating systems has to be a major headache as well.

oliverhbailey commented 2 years ago

I went to school for mechanical engineering and worked in my dads mold and casting shop during the summers starting at age 12. By the time I went to college, I had enough hurs to be a certified machinist and tool maker. By the time I graduated collecge, I was also a journeyman mold maker as well. I went to work at Joy manufacturing, who had a group of very seasoned engineers who were all ready to retire. My college friends laughed at me taking the job. But these guys were chomping at the bit to share their knowledge and after my first week, I started brigning a notpad to lunch as they shared their engineering problems and the creative solution they found. By the time the last one retired, I had a shelf of three ring binders of history that I used to train employees junior to me, which was almost the whole department. I bought an 8080 sigle board computer and took a Z80 assembler course before taing on the role of CNC mahince center director. That was after programming almost 45 very expensive CNC maching centers successfully. I left th job to assume a senior role at Advanced Operating Systems, where I wrote a number of developer tools for the TRS-80 series models I, III, and IV, and a turnkey system with the Commodore Pet

  1. . Then I began a product in the spring of 1981 when I unbxed a wire arapped version of the IBM 5150. I worked at Sams, until 1982 when I was offer a job with another fortune 50 company developing multi-user accounting sytems. But along the way, I made friends with Gary Kidall, Walt Jung, Don lancaster, and a whole host of other pioneers who became lifelong personal friends. I also worked on the first hardware PC security product released in 1983, writing the BIOS ROM extension using the CP/M version of Turbo Pascal. I ended up writing portions of the DOSPLUS, LDOS, and NEWDOS for the Radio Shack series, and got the first onsite microcomputer contract with TRW for the RepTrak turnkey client system that ran on the Pet 2000. I worked with the two gentlemen from IBM that designed the IBM 5150, and wrote the original PC-DOS 1.0 and 2.0 before IBM outsourced it to Microsoft. O knew most of the first 40 employees at Microsoft on a frist name basis, even the office staff. But being in operating systms development and coming from the machine tool industry, I was constantly crossing over between embedded and desktop/mainframes. That little security product becam the catylst for replacing IBM mini computers with the IBM PC and encrypted SNA connections to IBM 4300 mainframes. Which took me into protocols. I've been invloved with so many foundational projects of the industry that I've lost track. So at 70, I finally retired earlier this year/ But I'm still very involved with advanced computing. I alpha and beta tested the first native code C++ compiler back in 1985, have been a big user of Prolog, Small Talk, Pascal, C/C++ at the hardware level.

I am actually working on several projects for new controllers for Lasers and 3D Printers. But what I am doing is at a much different level then current controller and river technologies. So I report these things, when I verify they are a problem. You brought back my memories of the good old days with your history. I knew you were an old timer like myself because you didn't get offended or defensive. Working as a lead at Google thse days doesn't make some smart or good. Thanks for your reply, you have my email and I alway like talking to us old guys becaus I am having a ball in life these days.

Take care Greg.

Sincerely,

Oliver

On Thu, Jul 7, 2022 at 12:44 PM GregValiant @.***> wrote:

@oliverhbailey https://github.com/oliverhbailey 50+ years ago I was learning to program analog computers. Then we got an IBM 360. It filled a very large room with 10 or 12 cabinets. Anyone who opened the door to the room and let the air-conditioning out was promptly flogged. The hard discs were 36" in diameter and each had a capacity of 720k. The punch cards were a huge improvement.

That was the end of my formal software training. I'm a fair ME though and necessarily big on workarounds since nothing ever seems to fit as it's supposed to. The boys and girls at Ultimaker along with the main contributors will get out their BFH's and beat this thing into shape so it's more user friendly. I think the constant changes in the world of computing (and all the feature requests) keeps getting in the way. I would think that having to port the program to about 5 different operating systems has to be a major headache as well.

— Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12689#issuecomment-1177989793, or unsubscribe https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AD6CBIHK4OCCNBDG6LTNE6LVS4JRNANCNFSM523O7VZQ . You are receiving this because you were mentioned.Message ID: @.***>

oliverhbailey commented 2 years ago

Webester' t list your name under cunt.

On Fri, Jul 8, 2022, 5:04 PM Jelle Spijker @.***> wrote:

@oliverhbailey https://github.com/oliverhbailey I used to be:

  • paper delivery boy
  • dishwasher
  • cook
  • silversmith
  • aluminium extrusion die corrector
  • aluminium extrusion die designer
  • piping engineer
  • basic designer engineer shipbuilding
  • Assistant research and development project lead fluid dynamics
  • research and development project lead fluid dynamics
  • mechanical & software engineer/designer geoplymer process plants
  • Mechatronic engineer Fused Deposition Modeling printhead
  • Software engineer Fused Deposition Modeling slicing software

Or aren't we listing CV's?

— Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub https://github.com/Ultimaker/Cura/issues/12689#issuecomment-1179393818, or unsubscribe https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AD6CBICKWNSVYEH5WLLXCFDVTCQV7ANCNFSM523O7VZQ . You are receiving this because you were mentioned.Message ID: @.***>