# set Group Make a program have the group ID you tell it for sending and receiving with radio. ```sig radio.setGroup(0); ``` A group is like a cable channel (a @boardname@ can only send or receive in one group at a time). A group ID is like the cable channel number. If you do not tell your program which group ID to use with this function, it will figure out its own group ID by itself. If you load the very same program onto two different @boardname@s, they will be able to talk to each other because they will have the same group ID. ## Parameters * **id**: a [number](/types/number) from ``0`` to ``255``. ### ~ reminder #### Default radio group If you haven't set a radio group for the @boardname@, it will use one selected randomly. If you are transmiting data to a @boardname@ that has a different hardware version from the sending @boardname@, it will select a random default group that is not the same as the other @boardname@. To be certain that your program will send or receive data using the same radio group, you will need to first choose and set a radio group for your program if you want it to work between different versions of the @boardname@. ### ~ ## Simulator This function only works on the @boardname@, not in browsers. ## Example This program makes the group ID equal 128. ```blocks radio.setGroup(128) ``` ## See also [on received number](/reference/radio/on-received-number), [on received string](/reference/radio/on-received-string), [on received value](/reference/radio/on-received-value), [send number](/reference/radio/send-number), [send value](/reference/radio/send-value), [send string](/reference/radio/send-string) ```package radio ```