918af4f3ac
* 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>
93 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
93 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
# Uploading from Chrome for Windows
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## ~ hint
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Starting with Chrome 65 on Windows 10,
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you can use **WebUSB** to download with one-click.
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[Learn more about WebUSB...](/device/usb/webusb).
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## ~
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While you're writing and testing your programs, you'll mostly be [running them
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in the simulator](/device/simulator), but once you've finished your program you
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can **compile** it and run it on your micro:bit.
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The basic steps are:
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1. Connect your micro:bit to your computer via USB
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2. Click **Download** and download the `.hex` file
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3. Copy the `.hex` file from your computer onto the micro:bit drive
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## Requirements
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You need the following things to transfer and run a script on your micro:bit:
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* A-Male to Micro USB cable to connect your computer to your micro:bit. This is
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the same cable that is commonly used to connect a smart phone to a computer.
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* A PC running Windows 7 or later, or a Mac running OS X 10.6 or later
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## Step 1: Connect your micro:bit to your computer
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First, connect the micro:bit:
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1. Connect the small end of the USB cable to the micro USB port on your micro:bit.
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2. Connect the other end of the USB cable to a USB port on your computer.
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Your computer should recognise your micro:bit as a new drive. On computers
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running Windows, `MICROBIT` appears as a drive under Devices and drives. On a Mac
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it appears as a new drive under Devices.
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![](/static/mb/device/usb-windows-device.jpg)
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## Step 2 (optional): Configure Chrome to ask where to save the file
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You only need to do this once.
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1. Open the **Settings** for Chrome.
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2. Click **Advanced** at the bottom of the page.
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3. Find the **Downloads** settings.
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4. Enable the setting **Ask where to save each file before downloading**.
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## Step 3: Download your program
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1. Open your project on @homeurl@
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2. Click **Download**
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3. If you did Step 2 above, Chrome will ask where to save the `.hex` file,
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so save it into the `MICROBIT` drive.
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Otherwise, continue with one of the options in Step 4 below.
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## Step 4: Transfer the file to your micro:bit
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If the file was saved onto your computer, you will need to transfer it to the micro:bit.
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## Manual transfer
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Your `.hex` file (created in Step 3 above) appears as a download at the bottom of the browser.
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Click on the arrow next to the name of the file and then click **Show in folder**.
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![](/static/mb/device/usb-windows-chrome.png)
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In File Explorer, drag and drop the `.hex` file from the download folder onto the `MICROBIT` drive.
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Alternatively, right-click on the hex file, choose **Send to**, and then **MICROBIT**.
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![](/static/mb/device/usb-windows-sendto.jpg)
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## Step 5: After transferring the file
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* The LED on the back of your micro:bit flashes during the transfer (which
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should only take a few seconds).
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* Once transferred, the code will run automatically on your micro:bit. To rerun
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your program, press the reset button on the back of your micro:bit. The reset
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button automatically runs the newest file on the micro:bit.
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* By copying the script onto the `MICROBIT` drive, you have programmed it into the
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flash memory on the micro:bit, which means even after you unplug the micro:bit,
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your program will still run if the micro:bit is powered by battery.
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## ~hint
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Transfer not working? See some [troubleshooting tips](/device/usb/troubleshoot).
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## ~
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