My sketch queries a Real Time Clock, and depending upon the time, a digital pin switches to HIGH or LOW. I've tried both the Time and TimeAlarms libraries, but have ran into issues, plus have since found the RTClib to work well for me.
I created a few different programmed events based on time, the first of which is triggered to ON at 6am everyday and triggers OFF at midnight every night and this works perfectly, producing a steady output voltage at the respective digital pin.
However, when I get to my second alarm, I fear my knowledge of the code is failing me and keeping me from asking the right question(s) of the RTC. My thought is that if the hour is 9 and the minute is 0 and equal to or less than 10, that this would create a test that can only be true from 9:00 to 9:09, but the output is buggy. Every time the sketch loops, the respective pin (D31=Relay_B) pulses HIGH for maybe 100 milliseconds, then goes LOW for the remainder of the loop. This pulsing process is repeated while the condition is true then goes LOW until tested true again.
define# TURN_ON 0 // TURN_ON/OFF was defined to accommodate relay polarity
define TURN_OFF 1
if (now.hour() == 9 && now.minute() >= 00 && now.minute() < 10) // FeedPump1, ON 9am
{
digitalWrite(Relay_B, TURN_ON);
Serial.print("\t");
Serial.println(F("First 10 Minute Feeding")); // Text printed to serial monitor
Serial.print("\t");
}
else // Turn off time for FeedPump1, OFF 9:10am
{
digitalWrite(Relay_B, TURN_OFF);
}
Relay_B is scheduled to be true twice daily, for 10 minutes each time. I don't know if it matters, but Relay_A will be true during both of Relay_B being true to it's tests. Can someone please enlighten me how to ask the most efficient questions as I keep getting tied up mentally in semantics of what is true at what given moment in time.
The defines are because of the relay states are active high and it would confuse me when considering the desired end result. I will attach my whole sketch.
If it was my project I would test for the HOUR and then in a subsidiary test check the MINUTES just so I could understand what I was doing
Something like
if (HOUR == 9) {
if (MINUTE >0 && MINUTE < 10) {
// do whatever
}
}
myggle:
However, when I get to my second alarm, I fear my knowledge of the code is failing me and keeping me from asking the right question(s) of the RTC.
Perhaps use the IPO principle and do a logical seperation of:
Input
Processing
Output
Do not try to mix input with just a small part of the processing logic and then output directly before all processing is done.
For your relay switching I'd suggest a programming logic like that looping around in the loop() function (untested code):
// Input ==> read the current time from RTC
// Processing
boolean relayBstate=false; // initial guess is "relay B is OFF"
if (now.hour() == 9 && now.minute() >= 00 && now.minute() < 10) relayBstate=true; // 1st 'ON' time
if (now.hour() == 12 && now.minute() >= 00 && now.minute() < 10) relayBstate=true; // 2nd 'ON' time
if (now.hour() == 15 && now.minute() >= 00 && now.minute() < 10) relayBstate=true; // 3nd 'ON' time
// Output
if (relayBstate==true)
{
if (digitalRead(Relay_B)!=TURN_ON) Serial.println("Turn ON relay B");
digitalWrite(Relay_B, TURN_ON);
}
else
{
if (digitalRead(Relay_B)!=TURN_OFF) Serial.println("Turn OFF relay B");
digitalWrite(Relay_B, TURN_OFF);
}
Thanks for the feedback. I pasted the snippet about the test and mistyped the includes by mistake with hopes I would not have to explain why they were defined in the first place. Yet here I am again explaining them for other reasons. I was hoping someone would point out the flaws in my test(s) so I can learn from my mistake(s), but I guess not.
Thank you jurs for at least giving me a different way of doing things, I will start testing immediately.
Edit - @jurs, can you explain the purpose of using the NOT operator? I see that it is used in many places throughout the example sketches I've been through and never understood why it is important to ask in code if something is NOT, when the code never told it to be? Or why is the code testing to see if the light was turned on before the mention of the command to turn it on?
myggle:
Thanks for the feedback. I pasted the snippet about the test and mistyped the includes by mistake with hopes I would not have to explain why they were defined in the first place. Yet here I am again explaining them for other reasons. I was hoping someone would point out the flaws in my test(s) so I can learn from my mistake(s), but I guess not.
Thank you jurs for at least giving me a different way of doing things, I will start testing immediately.
Well, that can happen when you ignore the very first response.
I just tried a few combinations with, and without the not operator statement, and the result was the same. I even relocated the whole block to occur before the Relay_A test, and the resulted in Relay_B not even pulsing high momentarily. So I'm at a loss as to why this is the result.
The funny thing is that this was happening when I was using the Mega with an Ethernet shield on it, but now I am using an EtherMega which rules out hardware issues. To the best of your knowledge, can you spot why Relay_B is only pulsing HIGH and not steadily HIGH? Some weeks ago I tested to see if the relay channel was faulty by running the blink sketch for pins 30-37, and all pins went to HIGH for the duration I specified, so I know it has to be something in my code.
@aarg, I did not ignore the first response, I attached my sketch as an attachment because it is too many characters to fit into code brackets.
I will attach an updated version of my sketch as I added the boolean tests that jurs suggested, and modified the println language to be generic to the channel and not the event. I also cut out the second block for Relay_B as the boolean test can incorporate other tests.
if (now.hour() >= 6 && now.minute() >= 0) { // Turn on time for Veg Lights, ON at 6am
digitalWrite(Relay_A, TURN_ON);
Serial.print("\t");
Serial.println(F("Vegetative Lights On")); // Text printed to serial monitor
Serial.print("\t");
}
else if (now.hour() >= 0 && now.minute() >= 0) // "else if" was needed to create opposition to lights on
{ // Turn off time for Veg Lights, OFF at 12am
digitalWrite(Relay_A, TURN_OFF);
Serial.print("\t");
Serial.println(F("Vegitative Lights OFf")); // Text printed to serial monitor
Serial.print("\t");
}
Can you envision a scenario where the hour value is 6 or more, and the minute value is not greater than or equal to 0?
Can you envision a scenario where the else if test would not evaluate to true?
if (now.hour() >= 6 && now.minute() >= 0) { // Turn on time for Veg Lights, ON at 6am
digitalWrite(Relay_A, TURN_ON);
Serial.print("\t");
Serial.println(F("Vegetative Lights On")); // Text printed to serial monitor
Serial.print("\t");
}
else if (now.hour() >= 0 && now.minute() >= 0) // "else if" was needed to create opposition to lights on
{ // Turn off time for Veg Lights, OFF at 12am
digitalWrite(Relay_A, TURN_OFF);
Serial.print("\t");
Serial.println(F("Vegitative Lights OFf")); // Text printed to serial monitor
Serial.print("\t");
}
Can you envision a scenario where the hour value is 6 or more, and the minute value is not greater than or equal to 0?
*Hours count from 0-23, minutes 0-59. So if hours are 6-23 and minutes are 0-59, the tests becomes true and Relay_A is HIGH*
Can you envision a scenario where the else if test would not evaluate to true?
*If for example the now.hour is 3, this else test is false as the now.hour is outside of the true state as depicted above.*
The test for Relay_A does work flawlessly, but it will only be tested true once every 24 hours and for a duration of 18 hours. Relay_B will test true no less than twice daily, for the 10 minute period I desire. Initially I wanted for individualized text outputs on the serial monitor which then justified the need to break up the 24 hour time span for Relay_B into multiple tests that needed to be true in themselve only and false during other tests which further made for more complicated code I'm sure.
Now with using jurs scheme of using the boolean tests and my decision to change the output language to a one phrase fits all, the code no longer needs to reflect individualized blocks for individualized events. This all of course is predicated that I can find why Relay_B is only pulsing when it should be constant HIGH like that of Relay_A.
PaulS:
Do the pulses match the serial output? If not, you have a hardware problem that no amount of software tweaking is going to fix.
I don't know what serial output is but the serial monitor shows the text with every iteration of the loop, the same as it does for the Relay_A condition which is true 75% of the time. I just tested the hardware with this sketch;
void setup() {
// initialize digital pin 13 as an output.
pinMode(30, OUTPUT);
pinMode(31, OUTPUT);
}
// the loop function runs over and over again forever
void loop() {
digitalWrite(30, HIGH); // turn the LED on (HIGH is the voltage level)
digitalWrite(31, HIGH);
delay(1000); // wait for a second
digitalWrite(30, LOW); // turn the LED off by making the voltage LOW
digitalWrite(31, LOW);
delay(3000); // wait for a second
}
... and it resulted in the relays turning on the test lights for 3 seconds and off for 1 second as expected, so it has to be code?
I don't know what serial output is but the serial monitor shows
The Serial Monitor is an application that runs on the PC. It displays serial data that the Arduino output.
Since the simple sketch works, add to it.
Put all the code for printing the time to the serial port in a function. Call that function from loop(). Do NOT clutter up loop with a bazillion lines of code to print the time.
Get rid of the useless curly braces and the useless comments. Everybody knows that delay() causes a delay. It really isn't necessary to add a comment that says that delay() delays.