SE-TP2/libs/SD/examples/DumpFile/DumpFile.ino
2025-05-10 16:33:54 +01:00

66 lines
1.8 KiB
C++

/*
SD card file dump
This example shows how to read a file from the SD card using the
SD library and send it over the serial port.
Pin numbers reflect the default SPI pins for Uno and Nano models.
The circuit:
SD card attached to SPI bus as follows:
** SDO - pin 11
** SDI - pin 12
** CLK - pin 13
** CS - depends on your SD card shield or module.
Pin 10 used here for consistency with other Arduino examples
(for MKR Zero SD: SDCARD_SS_PIN)
created 22 December 2010
by Limor Fried
modified 9 Apr 2012
by Tom Igoe
This example code is in the public domain.
*/
#include <SD.h>
const int chipSelect = 10;
void setup() {
// Open serial communications and wait for port to open:
Serial.begin(9600);
// wait for Serial Monitor to connect. Needed for native USB port boards only:
while (!Serial);
Serial.print("Initializing SD card...");
if (!SD.begin(chipSelect)) {
Serial.println("initialization failed. Things to check:");
Serial.println("1. is a card inserted?");
Serial.println("2. is your wiring correct?");
Serial.println("3. did you change the chipSelect pin to match your shield or module?");
Serial.println("Note: press reset button on the board and reopen this Serial Monitor after fixing your issue!");
while (true);
}
Serial.println("initialization done.");
// open the file. note that only one file can be open at a time,
// so you have to close this one before opening another.
File dataFile = SD.open("datalog.txt");
// if the file is available, write to it:
if (dataFile) {
while (dataFile.available()) {
Serial.write(dataFile.read());
}
dataFile.close();
}
// if the file isn't open, pop up an error:
else {
Serial.println("error opening datalog.txt");
}
}
void loop() {
}