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Learning Javascript Robotics

Learning Javascript Robotics

By : Kassandra Perch
4.3 (6)
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Learning Javascript Robotics

Learning Javascript Robotics

4.3 (6)
By: Kassandra Perch

Overview of this book

There has been a rapid rise in the use of JavaScript in recent times in a variety of applications, and JavaScript robotics has seen a rise in popularity too. Johnny-Five is a framework that gives NodeBots a consistent API and platform across several hardware systems. This book walks you through basic robotics projects including the physical hardware builds and the JavaScript code for them. You'll delve into the concepts of Johnny-Five and JS robotics. You'll learn about various components such as Digital GPIO pins, PWM output pins, Sensors, servos, and motors to be used with Johnny-Five along with some advanced components such as I2C, and SPI. You will learn to connect your Johnny-Five robots to internet services and other NodeBots to form networks. By the end of this book, you will have explored the benefits of the Johnny-Five framework and the many devices it unlocks.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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10
Index

Multiple pins with several LEDs

For the next project, we're going to look at the Led object API and test several different methods. This is one of the benefits of Johnny-Five—abstraction. If you can understand the concept of an LED, you can use the Johnny-Five LED object without thinking about the underlying pins or timings. Let's go over the methods that we'll use for our project:

  • on() and off(): These turn an LED on and off. Under abstraction, this sets the pin that is wired to the LED to HIGH and LOW, respectively. We'll be using these in the REPL.
  • blink(time): This turns an LED on and off at a given interval. strobe() and blink() are aliases of each other and do the same thing.
  • pulse(time): This will cause an LED to pulse on and off in an eased manner. This requires an LED wired to a PWM pin. The time argument sets the length of each side of the pulse—500 will mean the LED will fade in for 500 ms and fade out for 500 ms, meaning a 1-second pulse.
  • fade...

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