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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

Using interrupts to detect pressed pushbuttons


Previously, we analyzed the advantages of disadvantages of reading digital inputs with polling as in the previous examples compared with the usage of interrupts for the same task. If we keep any of the pushbuttons pressed for a long time, the code behaves as if the pushbutton was pressed many times. Now, we don't want this situation to happen, and therefore, we will use interrupts instead of polling to detect when the pushbuttons are pressed.

Before we start editing our code, it is necessary to make changes to our existing wirings. The problem is that not all the GPIO pins support interrupts. In fact, pins number 0 and 1 don't support interrupts and we have our pushbuttons connected to them. In Chapter 1, Understanding and Setting up the Base IoT Hardware when we learned about the I/O pins included in the Intel Galileo Gen 2 board, we understood that the pins labeled with a tilde symbol (~) as a prefix for the number can be used as PWM output...

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