This folder contains a number of simulated lathe configs. the "lathemacro" config offers a number of simple macros to perform the most common lathe operations. The GUI that controls the macros can be viewed by clicking the "Cycles" tab top left of the graphical preview window. There are two load-time options to control the tab behaviour: 1) norun will hide the action button, use this if you want to use only a physical button (connected to gladevcp.cycle-start) to start the macros (Strongly recommended, especially with Touchy) 2) notouch will allow keyboard editing of the spinboxes. Otherwise the custom numeric keyboard will be shown. An example loadrt line, as used here in the Gmoccapy demo is: [DISPLAY] EMBED_TAB_COMMAND = halcmd loadusr -Wn gladevcp gladevcp -c gladevcp -U notouch=1 -U norun=0 -u lathehandler.py -x {XID} lathemacro.ui The window will resize slowly if you grab the corner and move the mouse inside the window. It's not as bad as it was, but still needs work. You may need to click the unmaximise button in the toolbar to get a window border to be able to use the resize handles. Notes on the keyboard: As well as the obvious functions and unit conversions, it can be used to enter fractions. For example if you type 1.1/2 it will automatically update to display 1.5000 and 16.17/64 will show 16.2656. This can be used in a limited way to halve the onscreen value eg for entering radius instead of diameter. However it only works for whole numbers: 100/2 will become 50 but 3.14149/2 is interpreted as 3 and 14 thousand halves so won't work. Notes on adding your own cycles: Create a new G-code subroutine in the same format as the existing ones. In Glade add a new tab to the 'tabs1' notebook and give it a name matching the new cycle. Edit the action button (inside an eventbox) to call the new G-code sub. Rename the action button to match the tab name and append '.action' eg MyCycle.action Create new artwork. I used Fusion360, the models are here: https://a360.co/3uFPZNv and the drawings are here: https://a360.co/3uFPZNv Esport the drawing page as PDF and import into the lathemacro.svg file in Inkscape. You will need to resize. Add your own arrows and annotations. Save the new layer in a layer named "layerN" (lower case) where N is the tab number, starting at zero. You will need to invoke the XML editor for this (Shift-Cmd-X on Mac) The entry boxes are positioned relative to a 1500 x 1000 image; the original size of the SVG. So you can hover your mouse over the image in Inkscape to determine the coordinates. In the in the case of on-drawing controls the coordinates are entered as an XML comment in the Tooltip for the control in x,y format (The surface speed, tool and coolant do not need this, they are in a fixed table) An example: