[NFBCS] Arduino Board Pins

Nathaniel Schmidt schmidty2244 at gmail.com
Thu Jul 23 02:04:26 UTC 2020


Hi Kelly,

 

Actually, turns out that jumper wire plugs are an adequate pin-counting device.  Thanks for the suggestions though.

 

Nathaniel

 

========================================

Nathaniel Schmidt

Undergraduate student

Bachelor of Computer Science (S306)

School of Information Technology

Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment

Deakin University, Cloud campus

 <https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/> https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/

 

Std. ID: 220493627

E:  <mailto:njschmidt at deakin.edu.au> njschmidt at deakin.edu.au

M: 0439591709

GitHub:  <https://github.com/njsch/> https://github.com/njsch/

Skype: nathaniel_schmidt1994

 

From: Kelly <yllekann at gmail.com> 
Sent: Saturday, 18 July 2020 2:06 AM
To: Nathaniel Schmidt <schmidty2244 at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [NFBCS] Arduino Board Pins

 

I personally wouldn't go that route; fingernails might not be a fine enough instrument to count with. You might be able to use a straightened paperclip instead of a stylus. Anything that's metal and finely-pointed should do the trick.





On Jul 17, 2020, at 08:02, Nathaniel Schmidt <schmidty2244 at gmail.com <mailto:schmidty2244 at gmail.com> > wrote:

Hi,

 

Would it be safe to use fingernails? It’s an easy way to go about it but I don’t want to bend the pins.

 

Nathaniel

========================================

Nathaniel Schmidt

Undergraduate student

Bachelor of Computer Science (S306)

School of Information Technology

Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment

Deakin University, Cloud campus

https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/

 

Std. ID: 220493627

E: njschmidt at deakin.edu.au <mailto:njschmidt at deakin.edu.au> 

M: 0439591709 <tel:0439591709> 

GitHub: https://github.com/njsch/

Skype: nathaniel_schmidt1994





On 17 Jul 2020, at 11:59 pm, Kelly via NFBCS <nfbcs at nfbnet.org <mailto:nfbcs at nfbnet.org> > wrote:

Hello! I generally use a stylus to count to which pin I need, as it is much smaller than a finger and can differentiate fairly easily. As for which ones are analog and which are digital, I would look at your instruction manual and determine which numbers they are. From there, you can use the stylus counting method to find them.
I hope that helps!
Kelly




On Jul 17, 2020, at 00:03, Nathaniel Schmidt via NFBCS <nfbcs at nfbnet.org <mailto:nfbcs at nfbnet.org> > wrote:

 

Hi all,

 

 

 

Just wondering if anyone knows of a viable tactile means of adequately

differentiating between and identifying each of the individual 13-14 pins on

an Arduino board? And can you tell on a tactile basis as to which ones are

digital as opposed to analogue? Looking for a means of connecting some

jumper wires to some temperature, humidity and infrared motion sensors and

the board itself for a university data capture technologies assignment.

Using an Arduino-compatible UNO r3 from Core Electronics.

 

 

 

Thanks,

 

 

 

Nathaniel

 

 

 

========================================

 

Nathaniel Schmidt

 

Undergraduate student

 

Bachelor of Computer Science (S306)

 

School of Information Technology

 

Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment

 

Deakin University, Cloud campus

 

https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/

 

 

 

Std. ID: 220493627

 

E: njschmidt at deakin.edu.au <mailto:njschmidt at deakin.edu.au>  <mailto:njschmidt at deakin.edu.au> 

 

M: 0439591709

 

GitHub: https://github.com/njsch/

 

Skype: nathaniel_schmidt1994

 

 

 

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