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How to Use Breadboard With Arduino

Hello and welcome to this new your lesson in which we will talk about the Breadboard. Now, this is a breadboard where you plug things to speaking of plugs here. As you can see in the picture below you can use this type of customized wires or you can use regular wire and just strip the end. they are wires with little plug in bit belt on.

You can just strip the insulation from regular copper wires. But these are easy because they come pre-cut and pre-stripped. Also they are colored so it's easy to tell them apart. Now that I've shown you those two things. Let me take a moment to expose the breadboard for you. Looks complicated with its letters and numbers but it's quite simple. The breadboard is just a short cut that's all. You don't need it but it will allow you to test circuits without having to solder them together.



soldering if you don't know when you bind  a specific type of metal around something to hold it together frequently used on the tips of wires the board creates specific electrical connections between its holes so that the wire don't have to be soldered.

Also Read: Everything You Need to Know About Arduino

The only trick we need to know is where those connections are. But I will show you and explain to you everything. As you can see in this picture so I will explain each location on the board. There are four areas needed to be clarified the areas numbers as you can see below.



We have one area to area three and four for Area 1 and 2 other the blocks in area one are connected to each other. It all the blogs and NEDIA do are connected to that. Does it provide areas for you to control the flow of power. Which circuit is going to have at least one wire attached to it attached to it. To block an area on and one wire attached to block an area to think of them as sides of rhetoric that all the water flows from one and through that through the device to the other end without completed circuit.

Nothing will happen and of all on one floor. For the record area one with the plus sign is known as cathode y that it too was a minus sign is known as a.. You don't need to remember that. I was just letting you know. Area 3 here. Inside there were three R5 of Blunk that are all connected to each other. For example if you block a wire in it into the air block on the far left and another ran into the earplug on the far right those two the those two wires will have a connection anyway and you plug anywhere else on the board will not be connected to the wires in there 12 inside. Inside your theory the plug can each have or are connected to themselves and nowhere else. Area for here. If you connected these two hauz with our wire.

Also Read: Everything You Need to Know About Arduino

The connection will extend into the row across from it. Why there are on the left and right side of the board share the same numbers. They are not connected. If you want them to share a connection you need to bridge that gap with wire. Again this is this is just a short cut fall saw doing the wires to their respective location. If you want to incorporate Arduino or build some nobbled of some sort you absolutely don't want to use a bead board but instead you want to just Soledad all the parts together.

However the bread bar is a great teaching tool. Please watch this practical demonstration of the breadboard article and lesson. Comment below if you need anything more to know about the breadboard.


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