From 8c2b5b979a75d109ae7cc306afc50d7ffe1e0366 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cristian Maglie Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2012 15:14:51 +0100 Subject: Moved libraries folder inside platform folder. Now libraries and examples are searched per board/platform --- .../stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino | 44 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 44 insertions(+) create mode 100644 libraries/Stepper/examples/stepper_oneStepAtATime/stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino (limited to 'libraries/Stepper/examples/stepper_oneStepAtATime/stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino') diff --git a/libraries/Stepper/examples/stepper_oneStepAtATime/stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino b/libraries/Stepper/examples/stepper_oneStepAtATime/stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino new file mode 100644 index 0000000..36d3299 --- /dev/null +++ b/libraries/Stepper/examples/stepper_oneStepAtATime/stepper_oneStepAtATime.ino @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ + +/* + Stepper Motor Control - one step at a time + + This program drives a unipolar or bipolar stepper motor. + The motor is attached to digital pins 8 - 11 of the Arduino. + + The motor will step one step at a time, very slowly. You can use this to + test that you've got the four wires of your stepper wired to the correct + pins. If wired correctly, all steps should be in the same direction. + + Use this also to count the number of steps per revolution of your motor, + if you don't know it. Then plug that number into the oneRevolution + example to see if you got it right. + + Created 30 Nov. 2009 + by Tom Igoe + + */ + +#include + +const int stepsPerRevolution = 200; // change this to fit the number of steps per revolution + // for your motor + +// initialize the stepper library on pins 8 through 11: +Stepper myStepper(stepsPerRevolution, 8,9,10,11); + +int stepCount = 0; // number of steps the motor has taken + +void setup() { + // initialize the serial port: + Serial.begin(9600); +} + +void loop() { + // step one step: + myStepper.step(1); + Serial.print("steps:" ); + Serial.println(stepCount); + stepCount++; + delay(500); +} + -- cgit v1.2.3-18-g5258