Wow!!! I just installed Visuino and tried it out. This is amazing! I've been using Arduino for about two months now. I've tried looking for code for beginner projects not installed in the IDE or Web Editor and it has been difficult. I tried Visuino and this is amazing! I've only been using it for about 15 minutes, but so far I don't understand why more people aren't talking about this. The F1 feature that opens the wiki, the in app browser, the Instructables...its fantastic. Thank you for this. I'm sure I will have questions later but right now I'm in! I'm adding you to my Featured Channels list on my channel. Lol, but seriously! Great Job!!!
very interesting, i would like to use an esp32 as a modbus rtu rs485 master to read registers 30001 30002 from digital meter with modbus rs485. is there a visuino example? thank you.
Yes, it is possible in the free version. If the buzzer is active buzzer, you can simply use timer and connect digital pin to start the timer and the output of the timer to another pin where the buzzer is.
@@BoianMitov Thank you for getting back so quickly. I just downloaded the program so I need to watch all (I have only watched 2) the videos to see how this is done. Thanks again for your time. I hope I can figure out what you were describing so that I don't loose interest in a program that looks like it could help me with some of my projects around the house.
@@BoianMitov I have to say that the more videos I watch, the more I am confused. I watched the one above and you had a clock module and used it, the you took the wires off of it and just put a wire from the input to the outputs in the middle. I don't know if it would help but it might help if you tell why you picked that module and then why you connected it to the pin you did and what it does, then why you picked the next output pin to the in our out of the next module and so on. I tried to generate the motion sensor to an arduino and to have it generate the 30000hz signal into the buzzer to no avail. Just not getting it. Myself it would be better if I knew why I used this module and plugged it in to this pin and what that did and so on. I have been a beginner to arduino for some time, and I thought this would be a better and faster way for me to generate projects! Maybe in the future. Thanks again.
@@amtpdb1 In this case I picked a pulse generator to pulse a pin with some relatively low frequency. For high frequency it is better to use the "Play Frequency Tone" component
@@zacharylamatrice2134 Yes, pca9685 is supported :-) . I think somebody may have already posted a tutorial, but not sure. It is super easy to do without tutorial thou... BTW: pca9685 is supported with 2 Visuino components - one as traditional PWM and another specifically for servos :-)
I have a horrible experience with visuino. Few days ago, I installed the software and was provided with a registration key. Subsequently, I had to format my computer and then I decided to install the software at my laptop. Accordingly, after installation, filled up the form to get the registration key as without that most of the components are locked. In the process, the visuino system sent a message check your mail. But even after three days, no mail with registration key has been received. Meanwhile I wrote to them. But they gave false advices. So my point is first I have to verify the quality of software and only then I can decide whether or not to purchase. But I think the company has not given any cognizance to this issue and only looking for its business. To get the reply mail, I wasted lot of time being a senior citizen which is totally unbecoming on the part of a sensible company. Yesterday also I sent another mail to them but no reply has been received.
You can simply login to your visuino account on the visuono site, and see your key. I am sorry if I have missed e-mail from you. Please e-mail me again if you are unable to find your key.
Yes, all analog sensors are connected the same way. www.instructables.com/id/Arduino-Nano-Using-Passive-Photo-Resistor-Sensor-W/ And here is how to use Infrared: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-JZpey-c9RkY.html
Sorry but even the voice to text converter can not translate your tutorial so hard to understand what you are saying and I really want to learn more about this software.
I am sorry, I am a software developer, not professional speaker :-( . There are however some great Visuino videos done by others in different languages :-)
Can I program a TFT Touch LCD which has a 4532 driver chip? (arduino uno) there is an option for ILI9341 but not for 4532 which is ST7735 in parallel mode not SPI.
You probably have a button module that connects to ground when pressed instead of to VCC. You can invert it ;-) www.instructables.com/id/Arduino-Nano-Invert-Button-With-Visuino/
If the button module does not have a resistor to 5V you will need to enable the builtin PullUp on the pin ;-) www.instructables.com/id/Arduino-Nano-Using-Pull-Up-Resistor-With-Visuino/
This program seems useless to me. There is only a cable connection, but that's it. I don't see how, for example, I will accept resistance data, calculate it and display it on a 4-digit 7-segment screen. Not to mention that it's full of bugs and doing nothing gives me mistakes. It's easier with Arduino IDE than with this. At least there is a logical connection between what is written and what he will do. Not to mention that the board does not look like the original for convenience, and the connectors are arranged radically differently.
The board is represented as a software component. Visuino is a software development tool, so it does not do anything with resistors since they can't really be controlled from the software ;-). It is also not a simulator, it is a code generator, and generates extremely highly optimized code that once compiled tales very little memory on the controllers. Visuino allows people to develop really complex, highly optimized projects in few minutes. Achieving same complexity takes months with standard coding. But if you prefer Arduino IDE, that's cool! :-) The more choices the better... :-)
Since I do this every day, and it works, something is wrong on your system or with your project. I run this type of code at least 10-20 times every day as part of me testing different sensors, and it is used by thousands of other people, so we need to know what you are doing different than all of us, or what is different on your system ;-)