jueves, 18 de febrero de 2016

lampara de colores



CÓDIGO:

*
  Arduino Starter Kit example
 Project 4  - Color Mixing Lamp

 This sketch is written to accompany Project 3 in the
 Arduino Starter Kit

 Parts required:
 1 RGB LED
 three 10 kilohm resistors
 3 220 ohm resistors
 3 photoresistors
 red green and blue colored gels

 Created 13 September 2012
 Modified 14 November 2012
 by Scott Fitzgerald
 Thanks to Federico Vanzati for improvements

 http://arduino.cc/starterKit

 This example code is part of the public domain
 */

const int greenLEDPin = 9;    // LED connected to digital pin 9
const int redLEDPin = 10;     // LED connected to digital pin 10
const int blueLEDPin = 11;    // LED connected to digital pin 11

const int redSensorPin = A0;  // pin with the photoresistor with the red gel
const int greenSensorPin = A1;   // pin with the photoresistor with the green gel
const int blueSensorPin = A2;   // pin with the photoresistor with the blue gel

int redValue = 0; // value to write to the red LED
int greenValue = 0; // value to write to the green LED
int blueValue = 0; // value to write to the blue LED

int redSensorValue = 0; // variable to hold the value from the red sensor
int greenSensorValue = 0; // variable to hold the value from the green sensor
int blueSensorValue = 0; // variable to hold the value from the blue sensor

void setup() {
  // initialize serial communications at 9600 bps:
  Serial.begin(9600);

  // set the digital pins as outputs
  pinMode(greenLEDPin,OUTPUT);
  pinMode(redLEDPin,OUTPUT);
  pinMode(blueLEDPin,OUTPUT);
}

void loop() {
  // Read the sensors first:

  // read the value from the red-filtered photoresistor:
  redSensorValue = analogRead(redSensorPin);
  // give the ADC a moment to settle
  delay(5);
  // read the value from the green-filtered photoresistor:
  greenSensorValue = analogRead(greenSensorPin);
  // give the ADC a moment to settle
  delay(5);
  // read the value from the blue-filtered photoresistor:
  blueSensorValue = analogRead(blueSensorPin);

  // print out the values to the serial monitor
  Serial.print("raw sensor Values \t red: ");
  Serial.print(redSensorValue);
  Serial.print("\t green: ");
  Serial.print(greenSensorValue);
  Serial.print("\t Blue: ");
  Serial.println(blueSensorValue);

  /*
  In order to use the values from the sensor for the LED,
  you need to do some math. The ADC provides a 10-bit number,
  but analogWrite() uses 8 bits. You'll want to divide your
  sensor readings by 4 to keep them in range of the output.
  */
  redValue = redSensorValue/4;
  greenValue = greenSensorValue/4;
  blueValue = blueSensorValue/4;

  //  print out the mapped values
  Serial.print("Mapped sensor Values \t red: ");
  Serial.print(redValue);
  Serial.print("\t green: ");
  Serial.print(greenValue);
  Serial.print("\t Blue: ");
  Serial.println(blueValue);

  /*
  Now that you have a usable value, it's time to PWM the LED.
  */
  analogWrite(redLEDPin, redValue);
  analogWrite(greenLEDPin, greenValue);
  analogWrite(blueLEDPin, blueValue);

}

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