Book Image

DIY Microcontroller Projects for Hobbyists

By : Miguel Angel Garcia-Ruiz, Pedro Cesar Santana Mancilla
Book Image

DIY Microcontroller Projects for Hobbyists

By: Miguel Angel Garcia-Ruiz, Pedro Cesar Santana Mancilla

Overview of this book

We live in a world surrounded by electronic devices, and microcontrollers are the brains of these devices. Microcontroller programming is an essential skill in the era of the Internet of Things (IoT), and this book helps you to get up to speed with it by working through projects for designing and developing embedded apps with microcontroller boards. DIY Microcontroller Projects for Hobbyists are filled with microcontroller programming C and C++ language constructs. You'll discover how to use the Blue Pill (containing a type of STM32 microcontroller) and Curiosity Nano (containing a type of PIC microcontroller) boards for executing your projects as PIC is a beginner-level board and STM-32 is an ARM Cortex-based board. Later, you'll explore the fundamentals of digital electronics and microcontroller board programming. The book uses examples such as measuring humidity and temperature in an environment to help you gain hands-on project experience. You'll build on your knowledge as you create IoT projects by applying more complex sensors. Finally, you'll find out how to plan for a microcontroller-based project and troubleshoot it. By the end of this book, you'll have developed a firm foundation in electronics and practical PIC and STM32 microcontroller programming and interfacing, adding valuable skills to your professional portfolio.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Technical requirements

The software tool that you will be using in this chapter is the Arduino IDE for editing and uploading your programs to the Blue Pill microcontroller board. The code used in this chapter can be found in the book's GitHub repository:

https://github.com/PacktPublishing/DIY-Microcontroller-Projects-for-Hobbyists/tree/master/Chapter12

The Code in Action video for this chapter can be found here: https://bit.ly/2SMUkPw

In this chapter, we will use the following pieces of hardware:

  • One solderless breadboard.
  • One Blue Pill microcontroller board.
  • One micro-USB cable for connecting your microcontroller board to a computer and a power bank.
  • One Arduino Uno microcontroller board.
  • One USB 2.0 A to B cable for the Arduino Uno board.
  • Two USB power banks.
  • One ST-Link/V2 electronic interface, needed for uploading the compiled code to the Blue Pill. Bear in mind that the ST-Link/V2 requires four female-to-female DuPont wires.
  • One...