// Speaker demo for Circuit Playground -- when tapped, plays a very short // digitized sound sample, very quietly (because teeny tiny speaker). #include #include #include // Enable ONE of these lines to pick a sound to play back when tapped: #include "coin.h" // Super Mario coin sound //#include "trek.h" // Star Trek TNG communicator noise volatile boolean play = false; // This function will be called automatically when a tap is detected by the // accelerometer. This just sets the global flag 'play' to true, which is // then detected in loop() (where the sound is then played)...doing heavy // processing within an interrupt function is sometimes considered poor form. void myFunction() { play = true; // Hey loop(), play the sound! } void setup() { CircuitPlayground.begin(); // Configure accelerometer for +-4G range, use the tap interrupt // feature to call myFunction() automatically when tapped. CircuitPlayground.setAccelRange(LIS3DH_RANGE_4_G); CircuitPlayground.setAccelTap(1, 127); attachInterrupt(digitalPinToInterrupt(7), myFunction, RISING); } void loop() { while(!play); // Wait for tap interrupt // Play sound data in the audio[] array (declared in one of the .h files). // This function "blocks" -- that is, program flow stops until sound is // done playing -- it does not play in the background. CircuitPlayground.speaker.playSound(audio, sizeof(audio), SAMPLE_RATE); // Calling speaker.end() after playing a sound is optional -- this will // turn off the pin 13 LED (it's connected to a microcontroller pin that's // also related to the speaker), but there's a small audible click when it // turns off. Tradeoffs! CircuitPlayground.speaker.end(); play = false; // Clear flag, wait for interrupt }