* change simulator svg * change radio image * Remove google fonts cdn * change color of 'advanced' button * font fix * font fix 2 * display fix * change fullsceen simulator bg * Continuous servo * handle continuous state * adding shims * update rendering for continuous servos * fixing sim * fix sig * typo * fix sim * bump pxt * bump pxt * rerun travis * Input blocks revision - add Button and Pin event types - merge onPinPressed & onPinReleased in new onPinEvent function - create new onButtonEvent function * update input blocks in docs and tests * remove device_pin_release block * Hide DAL.x behind Enum * bring back deprecated blocks, but hide them * shims and locales files * fix input.input. typing * remove buildpr * bump V3 * update simulator aspect ratio * add Loudness Block * revoke loudness block * Adds soundLevel To be replaced by pxt-common-packages when DAL is updated. * Remove P0 & P3 from AnalogPin Co-authored-by: Juri <gitkraken@juriwolf.de>
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foil circuits
The large holes at the bottom of the board are designed to attach alligator/crocodile clips to create electrical circuit with other components.
If you do not have crocodile clips at hand, you can use wires or even Aluminium foil to achieve the same result. We will show you how to connect the @boardname@ to headphones using Aluminium foil and tape.
Materials
- @boardname@ and battery pack (you can also power it via USB)
- a small piece of cardboard
- Aluminium foil
- tape
Assembly instructions
Tape the @boardname@ and battery pack to the card board. Make sure to remove the batteries while you are building your circuit.
Cut the thinnest strip of foil possible and roll it into a cable. You can also try to fold, whatever works for you. Build two of those wires.
Place the foil wire on the GND
pin and attach with a piece of tape. Press hard to get the best connection between
the foil and the pin board. Make sure the foil is not overlapping with the other pins!
Place the second wire on the P0
pin the same way. Make sure the wire does not overlap with the other pins!
Tape the headphone jack connector to the cardboard and roll the wire coming from GND
around the metal base.
Make sure the wire does not touch the other metal rings on the jack.
Tape the second wire on the head of the jack connector.