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-.. _arduino-constants:
-
-constants
-=========
-
-Constants are predefined variables in the Arduino language. They
-are used to make the programs easier to read. We classify constants
-in groups.
-
-
-
-Defining Logical Levels, true and false (Boolean Constants)
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-There are two constants used to represent truth and falsity in the
-Arduino language: **true**, and **false**.
-
-
-
-false
------
-
-false is the easier of the two to define. false is defined as 0
-(zero).
-
-
-
-true
-----
-
-true is often said to be defined as 1, which is correct, but true
-has a wider definition. Any integer which is *non-zero* is TRUE, in
-a Boolean sense. So -1, 2 and -200 are all defined as true, too, in
-a Boolean sense.
-
-
-
-Note that the *true* and *false* constants are typed in lowercase
-unlike HIGH, LOW, INPUT, & OUTPUT.
-
-
-
-Defining Pin Levels, HIGH and LOW
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-When reading or writing to a digital pin there are only two
-possible values a pin can take/be-set-to: **HIGH** and **LOW**.
-
-
-
-**HIGH**
-
-
-
-The meaning of HIGH (in reference to a pin) is somewhat different
-depending on whether a pin is set to an INPUT or OUTPUT. When a pin
-is configured as an INPUT with pinMode, and read with digitalRead,
-the microcontroller will report HIGH if a voltage of 3 volts or
-more is present at the pin.
-
-
-
-A pin may also be configured as an INPUT with pinMode, and
-subsequently made HIGH with digitalWrite, this will set the
-internal 20K pullup resistors, which will *steer* the input pin to
-a HIGH reading unless it is pulled LOW by external circuitry.
-
-
-
-When a pin is configured to OUTPUT with pinMode, and set to HIGH
-with digitalWrite, the pin is at 5 volts. In this state it can
-*source* current, e.g. light an LED that is connected through a
-series resistor to ground, or to another pin configured as an
-output, and set to LOW.
-
-
-
-**LOW**
-
-
-
-The meaning of LOW also has a different meaning depending on
-whether a pin is set to INPUT or OUTPUT. When a pin is configured
-as an INPUT with pinMode, and read with digitalRead, the
-microcontroller will report LOW if a voltage of 2 volts or less is
-present at the pin.
-
-
-
-When a pin is configured to OUTPUT with pinMode, and set to LOW
-with digitalWrite, the pin is at 0 volts. In this state it can
-*sink* current, e.g. light an LED that is connected through a
-series resistor to, +5 volts, or to another pin configured as an
-output, and set to HIGH.
-
-
-
-Defining Digital Pins, INPUT and OUTPUT
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Digital pins can be used either as **INPUT** or **OUTPUT**.
-Changing a pin from INPUT TO OUTPUT with pinMode() drastically
-changes the electrical behavior of the pin.
-
-
-
-Pins Configured as Inputs
--------------------------
-
-Arduino (Atmega) pins configured as **INPUT** with pinMode() are
-said to be in a high-impedance state. One way of explaining this is
-that pins configured as INPUT make extremely small demands on the
-circuit that they are sampling, say equivalent to a series resistor
-of 100 Megohms in front of the pin. This makes them useful for
-reading a sensor, but not powering an LED.
-
-
-
-Pins Configured as Outputs
---------------------------
-
-Pins configured as **OUTPUT** with pinMode() are said to be in a
-low-impedance state. This means that they can provide a substantial
-amount of current to other circuits. Atmega pins can source
-(provide positive current) or sink (provide negative current) up to
-40 mA (milliamps) of current to other devices/circuits. This makes
-them useful for powering LED's but useless for reading sensors.
-Pins configured as outputs can also be damaged or destroyed if
-short circuited to either ground or 5 volt power rails. The amount
-of current provided by an Atmega pin is also not enough to power
-most relays or motors, and some interface circuitry will be
-required.
-
-
-
-See also
---------
-
-
-- `pinMode() <http://arduino.cc/en/Reference/PinMode>`_
-- `Integer Constants <http://arduino.cc/en/Reference/IntegerConstants>`_
-- `boolean variables <http://arduino.cc/en/Reference/BooleanVariables>`_
-
-