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1. Digital Write¶
Digital Write is to output or write a digital signal to a digital pin. The digital signal has only two states, 0 or 1, 0V or 5V, so it allows some components, such as the LED and buzzer, to be on or off.
On the Arduino R3 board, there are 14 digital I/0 pins from 0 to 13, now use the pinMode() and digitalWrite() functions to write a high or low level to these digital pins.
pinMode(pin, mode): Configure the specific pin asINPUTorOUTPUT, here it needs to be set asOUTPUT.- Syntax
pinMode(pin, mode)
- Parameters
pin: the Arduino pin number to set the mode of.mode:INPUT,OUTPUT, orINPUT_PULLUP.
digitalWrite(pin, value): Write a high level (5V) or a low level (0V) to a digital pin to change the operating state of the component. If the pin has been configured as an OUTPUT with pinMode(), its voltage will be set to the corresponding value: 5V (or 3.3V on 3.3V boards) for HIGH, 0V (ground) for LOW.- Syntax
digitalWrite(pin, value)
- Parameters
pin: the Arduino pin number.value:HIGHorLOW.
Example of Digital Write:
const int pin = 13;
void setup() {
pinMode(pin, OUTPUT); // sets the digital pin as output
}
void loop() {
digitalWrite(pin, HIGH); // sets the digital pin on
delay(1000); // waits for a second
digitalWrite(pin, LOW); // sets the digital pin off
delay(1000); // waits for a second
}
Notes and Warnings
The pins 0~13 are all digital pins.
Do not use pins 0 and 1, as they are used to communicate with the computer. Connecting anything to these pins will interfere with communication, including causing the upload board to fail.
If the digital pins are used up, the analog pins (A0-A5) can also be used as digital pins.
Related Components
Below are the related components, you can click in to learn how to use them.