Arduino: If Statement Conditional

From OnnoWiki
Revision as of 16:21, 5 December 2015 by Onnowpurbo (talk | contribs) (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...)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

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 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
}