/********************************************************************************* * MIT License * * Copyright (c) 2024 Gregg E. Berman * * https://github.com/HomeSpan/HomeSpan * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all * copies or substantial portions of the Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE * SOFTWARE. * ********************************************************************************/ /////////////////////// PIXEL TESTER ////////////////////////// // This sketch is designed to help identify the proper settings to use for a NeoPixel, NeoPixel Strip, // or any device containing one or more single-wire addressable RGB or RGBW LEDs (the "Pixel Device"). // Before compiling, set PIXEL_PIN to the ESP32 pin that is connected to your Pixel Device, and set NPIXELS to // the numnber of Pixels in the Pixel Device. Note that for some strips a single chip controls more than one LED, // in which case NPIXELS should be set to the number of controlling chips, NOT the number of LEDs. // To start, the second argument of the Pixel constructor for the testPixel object below should remain // set to PixelType::RGBW // When run, the sketch will repeatedly cycle colors by setting ALL pixels in the device first to RED, then GREEN, // followed by BLUE, and then finally WHITE. After a short pause, the cycle repeats. // For each color the brightness will increase from 0 through MAX_BRIGHTNESS, and then back to 0. You can change // MAX_BRIGHTNESS to something lower than 255 if you want to limit how bright the pixels get. // For Pixel Devices with more than one pixel, diagnostics are as follows: // // * If all 4 colors repeatedly flash in the order expected, this means the base setting of PixelType::RGBW is correct! // // * If instead of each pixel being set to the same color, the pixels in the strip each light up with a different color // (or no color at all), this means you have an RGB LED, not an RGBW LED. Change the second parameter of the constructor // to PixelType::RGB and re-run the sketch. // // * If all of the pixels are being set to the same color, but the sequence is NOT in the order RED, GREEN, BLUE, change // the second parameter of the constructor so that the order of the PixelType colors match the sequence of the colors // that appear on the Pixel Device. For example, if your RGBW Pixel Device flashes GREEN, RED, BLUE, and than WHITE, use // PixelType::GRBW. // For Pixel Devices with only a single pixel, diagnostics are as follows: // * If all 4 colors repeatedly flash in the order expected, this means the base setting of PixelType::RGBW is correct! // // * If the pixel does not light at all when set to WHITE this means you have an RGB LED, not an RGBW LED. Change the // second parameter of the constructor to PixelType::RGB and re-run the sketch. // // * If all of the pixels are being set to the same color, but the sequence is NOT in the order RED, GREEN, BLUE, change // the second parameter of the constructor so that the order of the PixelType colors match the sequence of the colors // that appear on the Pixel Device. For example, if your RGB Pixel Device flashes GREEN, RED, and then BLUE, use // PixelType::GRB. ////////////////////////////////////// #include "HomeSpan.h" ////////////////////////////////////// #define MAX_BRIGHTNESS 255 // maximum brightness when flashing RGBW [0-255] #define PIXEL_PIN 26 // set this to whatever pin you are using - note pin cannot be "input only" #define NPIXELS 8 // set to number of pixels in strip Pixel testPixel(PIXEL_PIN, PixelType::RGBW); // change the second argument until device operates with correct colors ////////////////////////////////////// void setup() { Serial.begin(115200); delay(1000); Serial.printf("\n\nPixel Test on pin %d with %d pixels\n\n",PIXEL_PIN,NPIXELS); } ////////////////////////////////////// void flashColor(boolean r, boolean g, boolean b, boolean w){ for(int i=0;i=0;i--){ testPixel.set(Pixel::RGB(i*r,i*g,i*b,i*w),NPIXELS); delay(4); } } ////////////////////////////////////// void loop(){ Serial.printf("Red..."); flashColor(1,0,0,0); Serial.printf("Green..."); flashColor(0,1,0,0); Serial.printf("Blue..."); flashColor(0,0,1,0); if(testPixel.isRGBW()){ Serial.printf("White..."); flashColor(0,0,0,1); } Serial.printf("Pausing.\n"); delay(1000); } //////////////////////////////////////