Lab_interaccio/2021/Irina/Irina.ino
2025-02-25 21:29:42 +01:00

56 lines
1.7 KiB
C++

/*
Blink
Turns an LED on for one second, then off for one second, repeatedly.
Most Arduinos have an on-board LED you can control. On the UNO, MEGA and ZERO
it is attached to digital pin 13, on MKR1000 on pin 6. LED_BUILTIN is set to
the correct LED pin independent of which board is used.
If you want to know what pin the on-board LED is connected to on your Arduino
model, check the Technical Specs of your board at:
https://www.arduino.cc/en/Main/Products
modified 8 May 2014
by Scott Fitzgerald
modified 2 Sep 2016
by Arturo Guadalupi
modified 8 Sep 2016
by Colby Newman
This example code is in the public domain.
http://www.arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/Blink
*/
#define R1 13
#define R2 11
//#define R1 13
//#define R2 27
// the setup function runs once when you press reset or power the board
void setup() {
// initialize digital pin LED_BUILTIN as an output.
Serial.begin(115200);
pinMode(R1, OUTPUT);
pinMode(R2, OUTPUT);
digitalWrite(R1, LOW);
digitalWrite(R2, LOW);
Serial.println("hola");
}
// the loop function runs over and over again forever
void loop() {
digitalWrite(R1, HIGH); // turn the LED on (HIGH is the voltage level)
Serial.println("hola1");
delay(1000*map(analogRead(A0), 0, 1023, 1, 20)); // wait for a second
digitalWrite(R1, LOW);
//delay(500); // wait for a second
digitalWrite(R2, HIGH); // turn the LED on (HIGH is the voltage level)
Serial.println("hola2");
//delay(1000*map(analogRead(A0), 0, 1023 , 1, 20));
delay(20000);
digitalWrite(R2, LOW);
Serial.println("hola3");
//delay(500); // wait for a second
}