Step 1: What You Need?
1 x Arduino Board (Arduino UNO used in this tutorial)1 x LED (Red)
1 x 220 Ohm Resistor
1 x Analog sensor (a photoresistor will do)
1 x 10k Ohm Resistor
1 x Mini Breadboard
Male-to-Male Jumper Wires
Don't have components? Don't worry. Just click the component's name.
Don't have components? Don't worry. Just click the component's name.
Step 2: Build Your Circuit.
Step 3: Upload The Code.
1. Select the Arduino board type: Select Tools >> Board >> Select your correct Arduino board used.
2. Find the port number by accessing device manager on Windows. See the section Port (COM&LPT) and look for an open port named "Arduino Uno (COMxx)". If you are using a different board, you will find a name accordingly. What matters is the xx in COMxx part. In my case, it's COM3. So my port number is 3.
Select the right port: Tools >> Port >> Select the port number.
Select the right port: Tools >> Port >> Select the port number.
3. You can find this code in the example of Arduino IDE.
Select File >> Examples >> 03.Analog >> Calibration
Select File >> Examples >> 03.Analog >> Calibration
Click press the "upload" button (see the button with right arrow mark).
Before the setup, you set initial values for the minimum and maximum like so:
int sensorMin = 1023; // minimum sensor value int sensorMax = 0; // maximum sensor value
These may seem backwards. Initially, you set the minimum high and read for anything lower than that, saving it as the new minimum. Likewise, you set the maximum low and read for anything higher as the new maximum, like so:
// calibrate during the first five seconds
while (millis() < 5000) {
sensorValue = analogRead(sensorPin);
// record the maximum sensor value
if (sensorValue > sensorMax) {
sensorMax = sensorValue;
}
// record the minimum sensor value
if (sensorValue < sensorMin) {
sensorMin = sensorValue;
}
}
This way, any further readings you take can be mapped to the range between this minimum and maximum like so:
// apply the calibration to the sensor reading
sensorValue = map(sensorValue, sensorMin, sensorMax, 0, 255);
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