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Python Programming for Arduino

You're reading from   Python Programming for Arduino Develop practical Internet of Things prototypes and applications with Arduino and Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783285938
Length 400 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Pratik Desai Pratik Desai
Author Profile Icon Pratik Desai
Pratik Desai
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Python and Arduino FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with the Firmata Protocol and the pySerial Library 3. The First Project – Motion-triggered LEDs 4. Diving into Python-Arduino Prototyping 5. Working with the Python GUI 6. Storing and Plotting Arduino Data 7. The Midterm Project – a Portable DIY Thermostat 8. Introduction to Arduino Networking 9. Arduino and the Internet of Things 10. The Final Project – a Remote Home Monitoring System 11. Tweet-a-PowerStrip Index

Storing Arduino data in a CSV file


In the previous two sections, you learned methods to store values in a CSV file. Although the data required for the file was already initialized in the code, the same code could be modified to store Arduino input data.

To begin with storing Arduino data, let's create a circuit that produces these values for us. We used a motion sensor in the project of Chapter 3, The First Project – Motion-triggered LEDs, and a potentiometer in the exercise of Chapter 4, Diving into Python-Arduino Prototyping. We will be using these two sensors to provide us with digital and analog input values respectively. To develop the circuit required for this exercise, connect the potentiometer to the analog pin 0 and the PIR motion sensor to digital pin 11, as displayed in the following diagram:

Connect other Arduino pins such as 5V and the ground, as shown in the preceding Fritzing diagram. As we are going to use pyFirmata to interface Python with the Arduino board, you will have...

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