* 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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Uploading from Internet Explorer on Windows
While you're writing and testing your programs, you'll mostly be running them in the simulator, but once you've finished your program you can compile it and run it on your micro:bit.
The basic steps are:
- Connect your micro:bit to your computer via USB
- Click Download and download the
.hex
file - Click the down arrow next to Save in the bottom bar and select Save As.
- In the save dialog, save the
.hex
file into the MICROBIT drive
Requirements
You need the following things to transfer and run a script on your micro:bit:
- A-Male to Micro USB cable to connect your computer to your micro:bit. This is the same cable that is commonly used to connect a smart phone to a computer.
- A PC running Windows 7 or later, or a Mac running OS X 10.6 or later
Step 1: Connect your micro:bit to your computer
First, connect the micro:bit:
-
Connect the small end of the USB cable to the micro USB port on your micro:bit.
-
Connect the other end of the USB cable to a USB port on your computer.
Your computer should recognise your micro:bit as a new drive. On computers
running Windows, MICROBIT
appears as a drive under Devices and drives. On a Mac
it appears as a new drive under Devices.
Step 2: Download your program
- Open your project on @homeurl@
- Click Download
- When prompted, choose to save the compiled file onto your computer. The prompt will be different depending on which browser you are using, or whether you are using a Windows computer or a Mac
A message will appear at the bottom of the browser asking what you want to do with the file. Click on the arrow next to Save and click Save As
In the save dialog, save as the .hex
file to the MICROBIT drive.
Step 3: Transfer the file to your micro:bit
- The LED on the back of your micro:bit flashes during the transfer (which should only take a few seconds).
- Once transferred, the code will run automatically on your @boardname@. To rerun your program, press the reset button on the back of your @boardname@. The reset button automatically runs the newest file on the micro:bit.
By copying the script onto the MICROBIT
drive, you have programmed it into the
flash memory on the micro:bit, which means even after you unplug the micro:bit,
your program will still run if the micro:bit is powered by battery.
~hint
Transfer not working? See some troubleshooting tips.