Book Image

Mastering Arduino

By : Jon Hoffman
Book Image

Mastering Arduino

By: Jon Hoffman

Overview of this book

Mastering Arduino is an all-in-one guide to getting the most out of your Arduino. This practical, no-nonsense guide teaches you all of the electronics and programming skills that you need to create advanced Arduino projects. This book is packed full of real-world projects for you to practice on, bringing all of the knowledge in the book together and giving you the skills to build your own robot from the examples in this book. The final two chapters discuss wireless technologies and how they can be used in your projects. The book begins with the basics of electronics, making sure that you understand components, circuits, and prototyping before moving on. It then performs the same function for code, getting you into the Arduino IDE and showing you how to connect the Arduino to a computer and run simple projects on your Arduino. Once the basics are out of the way, the next 10 chapters of the book focus on small projects centered around particular components, such as LCD displays, stepper motors, or voice synthesizers. Each of these chapters will get you familiar with the technology involved, how to build with it, how to program it, and how it can be used in your own projects.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)

Introduction

In this chapter, we will look at a couple of ways that we can control our Arduino project remotely. For the first project, we will use the Keyestudio IR (infrared) receiver, which uses the HX1838 infrared control module. The HX1838 infrared control module is used in numerous IR receivers that can be used by the Arduino. Therefore, you do not need to specifically get the Keyestudio one that we use here.

An infrared transmitter has an LED that emits infrared radiation, which is picked up by the infrared receiver. When a button is pressed on the remote control, the LED on the transmitter will blink very quickly for a fraction of a second and the receiver will read the pattern of blinks and interpret it.

The Keyestudio IR receiver that we will be using in this chapter looks like the following photograph:

The pin marked with the S is the signal pin and should be connected...