Make work with great variety of things
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ I found a good 10A power supply for about $12 on Amazon.
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You can probably salvage one from some old thing.
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If you have under 80 lights, you can use an Adafruit Trinket.
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I used an Adafruit Pro Trinket for mine, which has 150+ lights.
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I used an Adafruit Pro Trinket for my 182-light display.
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(It's an issue of RAM).
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Of course, a standard Arduino will work just fine too!
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@ -23,9 +23,9 @@ Of course, a standard Arduino will work just fine too!
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This was coded to color-correct a specific type of GRB LEDs on wires I got from Amazon.
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It's coded to match the lights we already have, which are biased toward yellow and amber.
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You may have gotten lights wired RGB, in which case this is going to look very green.
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You may have gotten lights wired GRB, in which case this is going to look very green.
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It should be just a matter of switching the first two bytes in each color definition
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to go from GRB to RGB.
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to go from RGB to GRB.
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@ -33,7 +33,6 @@ Setup
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-------
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Plug your lights into pin 6 (or whatever you set `PIN` to in the code).
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Set `NUM_LEDS` in the code to how many are in your strip.
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Give the strip power and ground.
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If you have more than about 80 LEDs, you might need to provide an external
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@ -42,7 +41,12 @@ You can plug the LED strip into the +5v on the power supply;
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You can power your microcontroller from the beefier power supply, too,
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so you don't have to run USB just to power the microcontroller.
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The code as written wants pin 4 to be connected to ground.
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When you disconnect it,
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the whole strand goes white.
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My family has a tradition of the tree going from colors to white on the morning of the 25th.
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Usage
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-------
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Just provide power.
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If you connect `WHITE_PIN` to ground,
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everything goes white,
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which is a tradition in my family on xmas morning.
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@ -3,21 +3,42 @@
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#include <avr/power.h>
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#endif
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// Which pin your LED strip is connected to
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#ifdef Attiny85
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# define PIN 3
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#else
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# define PIN 6
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#define NUM_LEDS 150
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#endif
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// Which pin to pull to go full white. Comment to disable this feature.
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#define WHITE_PIN 4
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Adafruit_NeoPixel strip = Adafruit_NeoPixel(NUM_LEDS, PIN, NEO_GRB | NEO_KHZ800);
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// Order of the lights you got
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// How many LEDs you have. It's okay if this is too big.
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#ifdef Attiny85
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# define NUM_LEDS 80
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#else
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# define NUM_LEDS 200
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#endif
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// What percentage chance a chosen light has of being on
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#define ACTIVITY 50
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// Debug LED
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#define LED_PIN 1
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Adafruit_NeoPixel strip = Adafruit_NeoPixel(NUM_LEDS, PIN, NEO_RGB | NEO_KHZ800);
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const uint32_t colors[] = {
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0x440000, // Green
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0x44dd00, // Yellow
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0x44dd00, // Yellow
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0x22dd00, // Amber
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0x22dd00, // Amber
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0x00ff00, // Red
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0x008844, // Purple
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0x004400, // Green
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0xdd4400, // Yellow
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0xdd4400, // Yellow
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0xdd2200, // Amber
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0xdd2200, // Amber
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0x0000ff, // Red
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0x880044, // Purple
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0x000088, // Blue
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};
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@ -26,13 +47,19 @@ const int ncolors = sizeof(colors) / sizeof(*colors);
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void setup() {
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strip.begin();
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strip.show();
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#ifdef WHITE_PIN
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pinMode(WHITE_PIN, INPUT_PULLUP);
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#endif
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#ifdef LED_PIN
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pinMode(LED_PIN, OUTPUT);
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#endif
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}
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void loop_color() {
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for (int i = 0; i < NUM_LEDS/12; i += 1) {
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int pos = random(NUM_LEDS);
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if (random(100) < 20) {
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if (random(100) < ACTIVITY) {
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int color = random(ncolors);
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strip.setPixelColor(pos, colors[color]);
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} else {
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@ -57,9 +84,19 @@ void loop_white() {
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}
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void loop() {
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if (digitalRead(WHITE_PIN)) {
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#ifdef WHITE_PIN
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if (! digitalRead(WHITE_PIN)) {
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loop_white();
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} else {
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#else
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{
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#endif
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loop_color();
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}
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#ifdef LED_PIN
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static bool led = true;
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digitalWrite(LED_PIN, led);
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led = !led;
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#endif
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}
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