pxt-calliope/docs/device/data-analysis.md
Amerlander 918af4f3ac
Bump V3.0.22 (#110)
* 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>
2020-09-08 02:04:25 -07:00

1.2 KiB

Data Analysis

In addition to learning programming, the @boardname@ is a fantastic tool for observing and measuring things that happen in the natural world. The sciences rely on methods of observation, information gathering, and analysis. Using the @boardname@ with MakeCode, you can use the sensors and inputs to measure and capture physical events that occur. Measurement data can then be sent for recording by other devices like another @boardname@ or a personal computer.

Data graph logo

The Data Viewer in the MakeCode editor allows you to stream and log data from your programs. It will do this when you write data values using the serial write functions. When you try your code in the simulator or connect with USB, each value you write is saved and collected as a log for you to analyze later if you want.

These topics describe how to analyze your data using MakeCode with the @boardname@: