We need a date also with logThen do the NMEA strings include timestamps? The weather station can provide 10 Hz GPS, maybe you could just run log.
So get the date from the RTC. The RTC cannot provide milliseconds or anything smaller than a second. You would have to count those yourself and you really don’t want to.We need a date also with log
I don't understand your thinking. Let's say it is the tenth second of the minute and you divide by 10, what do you get?If I divide seconds by 10, will it work?
What tells you the sequence of the messages? The RTC only changes each second. What will tell you which .1s the logged message arrived? If you are only concerned about temporal sequence, just append a the last 3 digits of millis() to the time, that will get you a relative and unique time stamp—assuming I understand what you are trying to do.You are right sir. But What I want to say is this, for example, we are receiving messages from a device at 10Hz, so, if I divide 1 second by 10 I will get a fraction of a second. So, for example, if I get a message at 11:16:01.05 (HH: MM: SS) so next message will get a timestamp of 11:16:01.15.
No. You can change the rate sequentially but can't use more than one at a time.Respected Members,
Can I select multiple baud rates at one time at one serial port?