* 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>
2.5 KiB
Name Badge
Make yourself known with a fancy name badge powered by your @boardname@!
Code
First, let's get your name to display on the screen.
Button press
From the ||input:Input||
Toolbox drawer, drag an ||input:on button A pressed||
block onto the Workspace.
input.onButtonPressed(Button.A, function () {
})
Show a string
From the ||basic:Basic||
Toolbox drawer drag a ||basic:show string||
block into the ||input:on button A pressed||
block.
input.onButtonPressed(Button.A, function () {
basic.showString("Hello!")
})
Show my name
In the ||basic:show string||
block, type your name.
input.onButtonPressed(Button.A, function () {
basic.showString("My Name")
})
Test the badge
Go to the simulator and test your name badge by pressing button A.
input.onButtonPressed(Button.A, function () {
basic.showString("My Name")
})
Download
Download the program to your @boardname@:
- Make sure your @boardname@ is plugged into the computer.
- Click the
|Download|
button.
Make
Now that you have your name showing on the @boardname@, let's make a proper badge to wear and display it on.
Cut out a badge shape from a piece of colored construction paper.
Loop a piece of duct tape and stick it on the back of your @boardname@.
Stick your @boardname@ onto the front of your badge.
Using a hole-punch, punch out 2 holes in the top of your badge.
Attach the battery pack to the @boardname@.
Tape battery pack onto the back of the badge.
Thread a shoelace through the top 2 holes of your badge.
Tie a knot at the end of your shoelace
Decorate your badge with colored paper, markers, stickers, glitter.
It's now finished! your badge is ready let others know who you are.