Arduino
tinyusb
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Arduino | tinyusb | |
---|---|---|
139 | 48 | |
14,005 | 4,532 | |
0.5% | - | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
8 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Java | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Arduino
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Which electronic kit should I get ? Absolute beginner
I learned from looking at example code in the Arduino IDE (a really good and free code editor https://www.arduino.cc/en/software). The Arduino IDE allows you to add more boards (like ESP32, ESP8266, Tiny etc.) so you're not limited to using only their Arduino boards.
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Robot Tour Software Problems
Based on what I am seeing from the Keystudio website, the software you need is just the Arduino IDE. This can be downloaded from Arduino.cc for most operating systems, including Mac OSX. You may need to install support for other boards or install libraries to make it work with the Arduino and hat included with the kit.
- General information about getting started with the Pico SDK
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Save Data to Kintone with an ESP8266
Download and install the Arduino IDE. After installation, open the IDE to the first sketch.
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I am a noob at this pls dont roast
Well, your first course of action would be to download the software - https://www.arduino.cc/en/software
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How to begin
You can download the IDE from here.
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arduino leonardo
You will need to download and install the Arduino IDE to do that. I would suggest the Legacy 1.8.x IDE or the Arduino Web Editor (which will still require that you install some software on your computer to help transfer the program to the Arduino).
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How to program a Raspberry Pico to make a button box
The software used for that video is the arduino IDE https://www.arduino.cc/en/software
- [Arduino] Réflexions sur Arduino IDE 2.0?
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Trying my hand at a brake
Wiring: You're on the right track with your wiring assumptions. The red wire should connect to the 5V pin, the black wire to the GND pin, and the green wire to one of the analog input pins (A0-A5) on the Arduino Leonardo. For example, you can connect the green wire to the A0 pin. Programming the Arduino Leonardo: To translate the handbrake input to Assetto Corsa, you'll need to program the Arduino Leonardo to act as a USB HID (Human Interface Device). This will allow your computer to recognize it as a game controller. First, you'll need to install the Arduino IDE (Integrated Development Environment) on your computer. You can download it from the official website: https://www.arduino.cc/en/software
tinyusb
- An open source cross-platform USB stack for embedded system
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Bluetooth to USB Audio bridge
Implementing the required USB host interface is another hurdle, but tinyusb seems to have sorted most of that out, except that UAC2 is implemented as a device while you need a host.
- So I started porting braids to the PI PICO and ended with a generative drum machine
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USB CDC: Multiple Virtual COM Ports
Have a look at TinyUSB. It supports the STM32WB and demo programs for the Nucleo-WB55RG. It even offers an example for dual CDC ports, so very close to what you're looking for.
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Looking for well written, modern C++ (17/20) example projects for microcontrollers
Second: Distrust, misunderstanding, and out of date opinions of C++ in embedded spaces. I often see "compatibilty" thrown around as a goal for using C and not C++, but for most modern embedded systems, C++ compilers exist and are (usually) well tuned. Arm is a shining example here*. C++ is more optimizable than C as the intent can be clearer to the compiler. C++ constexpr and templates are a godsend for embedded systems, and I used both heavily in my recent arduino and pico testing. I combined both of them for a really cool experimental USB interface descriptor builder that runs at compile time and avoids the need to count byte sizes, but I gave up on it when the maintainer said C only, despite the fact that C can't do that. I was similarly disappointed when the pico "C++" was C only, as there was no backwards compatibility necessary.
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Pico + CH559 = USB Midi host?
I looked at this but the fork seems to have had a lot of problems from looking at the PR: https://github.com/hathach/tinyusb/pull/1219
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Badger 2040: tiny kit ereader
I think a better solution might be to use a USB flash drive in the usbc port. Unfortunately micropython and circuitpython don't support this (yet), so you'd have to use c++ https://github.com/hathach/tinyusb
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ESP32-S3 Update via USB?
It's possible to make the s3 be a mass storage device via TinyUSB. https://github.com/hathach/tinyusb/tree/master/examples/device/cdc_msc_freertos
- Microcontroller that can read voltage?
- how do emulate a keyboard over usb? wherever I look I only see libraries and tutorials on how to use the eps32 as a Bluetooth keyboard not a wired one
What are some alternatives?
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
esp32-s2-usb-host-cdc
WLED - Control WS2812B and many more types of digital RGB LEDs with an ESP8266 or ESP32 over WiFi!
libusb - A cross-platform library to access USB devices
Makelangelo-software - Software for plotters - especially the wall-hanging polargraph also called Makelangelo.
lufa - LUFA - the Lightweight USB Framework for AVRs.
arduino-create-agent - The Arduino Create Agent
hid-remapper - USB input remapping dongle
Marlin - Marlin is an optimized firmware for RepRap 3D printers based on the Arduino platform. Many commercial 3D printers come with Marlin installed. Check with your vendor if you need source code for your specific machine.
rt-thread - RT-Thread is an open source IoT real-time operating system (RTOS).
BiglyBT - Feature-filled Bittorrent client based on the Azureus open source project
Adafruit_TinyUSB_Arduino - Arduino library for TinyUSB