Arduino board designs use a variety of microprocessors and controllers. The boards are equipped with sets of digital and analog input/output (I/O) pins that may be interfaced to various expansion boards ('shields') or breadboards (For prototyping) and other circuits. The boards feature serial communications interfaces, including Universal Serial Bus (USB) on some models, which are also used for loading programs from personal computers. The microcontrollers can be programmed using C and C++ programming languages. In addition to using traditional compiler toolchains, the Arduino project provides an integrated development environment (IDE) based on the Processing language project.
References#
- Arduino Home
- Arduino on Wikipedia
- Arduino Language Reference (online)
- Arduino Language Reference (PDF)
- Arduino Cookbook by Michael Margolis
- Arduino Programming Notebook by Brian Evans
- Arduino Cheat Sheet from SparkFun