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Internet of Things with Python

You're reading from   Internet of Things with Python Create exciting IoT solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785881381
Length 388 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Gaston C. Hillar Gaston C. Hillar
Author Profile Icon Gaston C. Hillar
Gaston C. Hillar
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding and Setting up the Base IoT Hardware FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Python on Intel Galileo Gen 2 3. Interacting with Digital Outputs with Python 4. Working with a RESTful API and Pulse Width Modulation 5. Working with Digital Inputs, Polling and Interrupts 6. Working with Analog Inputs and Local Storage 7. Retrieving Data from the Real World with Sensors 8. Displaying Information and Performing Actions 9. Working with the Cloud 10. Analyzing Huge Amounts of Data with Cloud-based IoT Analytics A. Exercise Answers Index

Understanding pushbuttons and pullup resistors


We controlled the brightness levels for red, green, and blue LEDs with a RESTful API. Then, we replaced the three LEDs with a single RGB LED and generated lights of different colors with the same RESTful API. Now, we want to make it possible for the users to change the brightness level for the three components with two pushbuttons added to the breadboard:

  • A pushbutton to turn off all the colors, that is, to set all the colors to a brightness level equal to 0

  • A pushbutton to set all the colors to their maximum brightness levels, that is, to set all the colors to a brightness level equal to 255

When the user presses the pushbutton, also known as a microswitch, it acts like a wire, and therefore, it lets the current flow through the circuit in which it is incorporated. When the pushbutton isn't pressed, the circuit in which it is incorporated is interrupted. Thus, whenever the user releases the pushbutton, the circuit is interrupted. Obviously, we...

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