Bouton-poussoir à l'aide d'un Arduino

Pushbuttons or switches connect two points in a circuit when you press them. This example turns on the built-in LED on pin 13 when you press the button.

Push-button using an Arduino

image developed using Fritzing. For more circuit examples, see the Fritzing project page

Connect three wires to the Arduino board. The first two, red and black, connect to the two long vertical rows on the side of the breadboard to provide access to the 5 volt supply and ground. The third wire goes from digital pin 2 to one leg of the pushbutton. That same leg of the button connects through a pull-down resistor (here 10 KOhms) to ground. The other leg of the button connects to the 5 volt supply.

When the pushbutton is open (unpressed) there is no connection between the two legs of the pushbutton, so the pin is connected to ground (through the pull-down resistor) and we read a LOW. When the button is closed (pressed), it makes a connection between its two legs, connecting the pin to 5 volts, so that we read a HIGH.

You can also wire this circuit the opposite way, with a pullup resistor keeping the input HIGH, and going LOW when the button is pressed. If so, the behavior of the sketch will be reversed, with the LED normally on and turning off when you press the button.

If you disconnect the digital i/o pin from everything, the LED may blink erratically. This is because the input is “floating” – that is, it will randomly return either HIGH or LOW. That’s why you need a pull-up or pull-down resistor in the circuit.

Schematic:

Push-button using an Arduino Schematic

Code

/*
Button

Turns on and off a light emitting diode(LED) connected to digital
pin 13, when pressing a pushbutton attached to pin 2.

The circuit:
* LED attached from pin 13 to ground
* pushbutton attached to pin 2 from +5V
* 10K resistor attached to pin 2 from ground

* Note: on most Arduinos there is already an LED on the board
attached to pin 13.

Major Components in Project

Hardware

  • Arduino Board
  • momentary button or switch
  • 10K ohm resistor
  • breadboard
  • hook-up wire

A Propos De L'Auteur

Ibrar Ayyub

Je suis expérimenté, rédacteur technique, titulaire d'une Maîtrise en informatique de BZU Multan, Pakistan à l'Université. Avec un arrière-plan couvrant diverses industries, notamment en matière de domotique et de l'ingénierie, j'ai perfectionné mes compétences dans la rédaction claire et concise du contenu. Compétent en tirant parti de l'infographie et des diagrammes, je m'efforce de simplifier des concepts complexes pour les lecteurs. Ma force réside dans une recherche approfondie et de présenter l'information de façon structurée et logique format.

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