Difference between revisions of "Arduino: If Statement Conditional"

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(New page: If Statement (Conditional Statement) The if() statement is the most basic of all programming control structures. It allows you to make something happen or not, depending on whether a give...)
 
 
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If Statement (Conditional Statement)
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Sumber: https://www.arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/ifStatementConditional
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The if() statement is the most basic of all programming control structures. It allows you to make something happen or not, depending on whether a given condition is true or not. It looks like this:
 
The if() statement is the most basic of all programming control structures. It allows you to make something happen or not, depending on whether a given condition is true or not. It looks like this:
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   delay(1);        // delay in between reads for stability
 
   delay(1);        // delay in between reads for stability
 
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  }
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==Referensi==
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* https://www.arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/ifStatementConditional

Latest revision as of 16:22, 5 December 2015

Sumber: https://www.arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/ifStatementConditional


The if() statement is the most basic of all programming control structures. It allows you to make something happen or not, depending on whether a given condition is true or not. It looks like this:

if (someCondition) {
   // do stuff if the condition is true
}

There is a common variation called if-else that looks like this:

if (someCondition) {
   // do stuff if the condition is true
} else {
   // do stuff if the condition is false
}

There's also the else-if, where you can check a second condition if the first is false:

if (someCondition) {
   // do stuff if the condition is true
} else if (anotherCondition) {
   // do stuff only if the first condition is false
   // and the second condition is true
}

You'll use if statements all the time. The example below turns on an LED on pin 13 (the built-in LED on many Arduino boards) if the value read on an analog input goes above a certain threshold.


Hardware Required

  • Arduino or Genuino Board
  • Potentiometer or variable resistor


Rangkaian

AnalogReadSerial BB.png
AnalogReadSerial sch.png


Code

/*
  Conditionals - If statement

 This example demonstrates the use of if() statements.
 It reads the state of a potentiometer (an analog input) and turns on an LED
 only if the potentiometer goes above a certain threshold level. It prints the analog value
 regardless of the level.

 The circuit:
 * potentiometer connected to analog pin 0.
 Center pin of the potentiometer goes to the analog pin.
 side pins of the potentiometer go to +5V and ground
 * LED connected from digital pin 13 to ground

 * Note: On most Arduino boards, there is already an LED on the board
 connected to pin 13, so you don't need any extra components for this example.

 created 17 Jan 2009
 modified 9 Apr 2012
 by Tom Igoe

This example code is in the public domain. 

http://www.arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/IfStatement

 */

// These constants won't change:
const int analogPin = A0;    // pin that the sensor is attached to
const int ledPin = 13;       // pin that the LED is attached to
const int threshold = 400;   // an arbitrary threshold level that's in the range of the analog input

void setup() {
  // initialize the LED pin as an output:
  pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
  // initialize serial communications:
  Serial.begin(9600);
}

void loop() {
  // read the value of the potentiometer:
  int analogValue = analogRead(analogPin); 

  // if the analog value is high enough, turn on the LED:
  if (analogValue > threshold) {
    digitalWrite(ledPin, HIGH);
  } else {
    digitalWrite(ledPin, LOW);
  }

  // print the analog value:
  Serial.println(analogValue);
  delay(1);        // delay in between reads for stability
}


Referensi