Reader small image

You're reading from  Hands-On Embedded Programming with C++17

Product typeBook
Published inJan 2019
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788629300
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Maya Posch
Maya Posch
author image
Maya Posch

Maya Posch is a senior C++ developer with more than 15 years of experience. Discovering the joys of programming early on, and later the joys of electronics, she has always expressed a profound interest in technology, a passion that she gladly shares with others. Describing herself as a C developer who happens to like C++ and Ada, she likes to seek the limits of what can be done with the minimum of code and hardware to accomplish everything that is cool, new, and exciting. She also enjoys FPGA development, AI, and robotics research, in addition to creative writing, music, and drawing.
Read more about Maya Posch

Right arrow

Keeping interrupt handlers short


The very nature of an interrupt dictates that it interrupts the regular execution of the processor, switching to the interrupt handler instead. Any microsecond that we spend in the interrupt handler code is a microsecond during which we aren't running the other routines or handling other interrupts.

To prevent any issues arising from this, interrupt handlers (ISRs) should be kept as short as possible, ideally merely updating a single value in a quick and safe manner before ending the ISR and resuming normal operation.

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Hands-On Embedded Programming with C++17
Published in: Jan 2019Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788629300

Author (1)

author image
Maya Posch

Maya Posch is a senior C++ developer with more than 15 years of experience. Discovering the joys of programming early on, and later the joys of electronics, she has always expressed a profound interest in technology, a passion that she gladly shares with others. Describing herself as a C developer who happens to like C++ and Ada, she likes to seek the limits of what can be done with the minimum of code and hardware to accomplish everything that is cool, new, and exciting. She also enjoys FPGA development, AI, and robotics research, in addition to creative writing, music, and drawing.
Read more about Maya Posch