hi,
im running out of pins on my 328 id like to add a 4 button keypad to it ive seen somewhere you can add extra switches / pins by using an array of different value resistors not sure how it works maby by different voltages to a pin somehow?
can someone point me in the right direction or show me an example
thats way too expensive for my budget and it wont fit my panel but really good value for what it is though thnks, btw got my project finally working at last, works really well ready to sell nearly
this is for my next thing im trying to do but im running out of pins, maby the technique was resistor divider of sorts to have a pin that could see several switches ?
checkout the schematics for the button on that lcd... shows you how to run multiple buttons on a single Analog pin
also comes with sample code to drive it as well
What else do you have connected to your Arduino? It's often possible to use the same pin to drive multiple devices. For example, if you already have an LCD display connected, you can probably share 4 pins between the LCD and the keypad.
Tyre are various options once you start using up all pins.
Move to another uC with more pins, such as 644P, 1284P or 2560.
Put other devices on shared buses, such as I2C and SPI, to free up other pins. This can require use of port expanders such as the PCF8574 which gives 8 input/outputs for 2 shared pins on the uC.
Use a voltage divided to read multiple buttons on an Analog pin. It needs tolerances building in and debouncing.
Matrix buttons and make use of the Keypad library to give you up to 9 buttons on 6 pins, 16 on 4 pins, 25 on 5 pins etc. Upto 4 x 4 (8 pins) can also be used together with a PCF8574 and Keypad_I2C to get 16 buttons on 2 pins. This can be repeated on the same two I2C pins to have 32, 64, 128 buttons or more.
Use cheap shift registers, such as the 8 bit 74HC595, and cascade to expand input/outputs using just 3 uC pins. limited only by the processing overhead to drive the number of shift registers you incorporate.