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Arduino board

Original price was: ₨ 4,000.Current price is: ₨ 3,200. & Free Shipping

An Arduino board is a small, open-source computer board called a microcontroller, designed for building electronics projects.

Think of it as the “brain” for your project. You connect components like sensors, LEDs, and motors to its pins, then write simple code on your computer and upload it to the board (usually via USB). The code tells the board how to read inputs (like a button press) and create outputs (like turning on a light). It’s popular because it’s inexpensive, easy to learn, and very flexible for both beginners and experts.

Description

Description

 

Arduino is an open-source electronics platform based on easy-to-use hardware and software. It’s designed for anyone interested in creating interactive objects or environments. An Arduino board can read inputs—like light on a sensor, a finger on a button, or a Twitter message—and turn them into an output, such as activating a motor, turning on an LED, or publishing something online.

Key Details

 

  • Hardware: The physical board is a microcontroller (like a tiny computer) that you can program. The most popular version is the “Arduino Uno.”

  • Software: You tell the board what to do by writing code in the Arduino programming language using an application called the Arduino IDE (Integrated Development Environment).

  • Inputs/Outputs: The board has pins that you can connect to sensors, motors, lights, and other electronic components.

    • Digital Pins: These pins can be either on (HIGH) or off (LOW). Some of these also support Pulse-Width Modulation (PWM) to simulate analog outputs (like dimming an LED).

    • Analog Pins: These pins can read a range of values, which is useful for getting data from sensors that don’t just have an on/off state.

  • Power: Arduino boards can typically be powered via a USB cable from a computer or by using an external power supply, like a battery or an AC adapter.

  • Open-Source: Both the hardware designs and the software are open-source, meaning anyone is free to use, modify, and distribute them. This has led to a large community and a wide variety of compatible boards and accessories (called “shields”).

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