After you use the Arduino IDE Tools/Auto Format, do a Ctl-A (select ALL) and Ctl-C Copy. Now create a post and first enter needed text, then click the <> symbol ^^^ above. In the window that opens, do a Ctl-V paste. Save the draft (near bottom of the post window) and then click Review which is beside Save. Here is your old code.
#include <HX711_ADC.h> #if defined(ESP8266) || defined(ESP32) || defined(AVR) #include <EEPROM.h> #endif //pins: const int HX711_dout = 4; //mcu > HX711 dout pin const int HX711_sck = 5; //mcu > HX711 sck pin //HX711 constructor: HX711_ADC LoadCell(HX711_dout, HX711_sck); const int calVal_eepromAdress = 0; unsigned long t = 0; void setup() { Serial.begin(57600); delay(10); Serial.println(); Serial.println("Starting..."); LoadCell.begin(); //LoadCell.setReverseOutput(); //uncomment to turn a negative output value to positive unsigned long stabilizingtime = 2000; // preciscion right after power-up can be improved by adding a few seconds of stabilizing time boolean _tare = true; //set this to false if you don't want tare to be performed in the next step LoadCell.start(stabilizingtime, _tare); if (LoadCell.getTareTimeoutFlag() || LoadCell.getSignalTimeoutFlag()) { Serial.println("Timeout, check MCU>HX711 wiring and pin designations"); while (1) ; } else { LoadCell.setCalFactor(1.0); // user set calibration value (float), initial value 1.0 may be used for this sketch Serial.println("Startup is complete"); } while (!LoadCell.update()) ; calibrate(); //start calibration procedure } void loop() { static boolean newDataReady = 0; const int serialPrintInterval = 0; //increase value to slow down serial print activity // check for new data/start next conversion: if (LoadCell.update()) newDataReady = true; // get smoothed value from the dataset: if (newDataReady) { if (millis() > t + serialPrintInterval) { float i = LoadCell.getData(); Serial.print("Load_cell output val: "); Serial.println(i); newDataReady = 0; t = millis(); } } // receive command from serial terminal if (Serial.available() > 0) { char inByte = Serial.read(); if (inByte == 't') LoadCell.tareNoDelay(); //tare else if (inByte == 'r') calibrate(); //calibrate else if (inByte == 'c') changeSavedCalFactor(); //edit calibration value manually } // check if last tare operation is complete if (LoadCell.getTareStatus() == true) { Serial.println("Tare complete"); } } void calibrate() { Serial.println("***"); Serial.println("Start calibration:"); Serial.println("Place the load cell an a level stable surface."); Serial.println("Remove any load applied to the load cell."); Serial.println("Send 't' from serial monitor to set the tare offset."); boolean _resume = false; while (_resume == false) { LoadCell.update(); if (Serial.available() > 0) { if (Serial.available() > 0) { char inByte = Serial.read(); if (inByte == 't') LoadCell.tareNoDelay(); } } if (LoadCell.getTareStatus() == true) { Serial.println("Tare complete"); _resume = true; } } Serial.println("Now, place your known mass on the loadcell."); Serial.println("Then send the weight of this mass (i.e. 100.0) from serial monitor."); float known_mass = 0; _resume = false; while (_resume == false) { LoadCell.update(); if (Serial.available() > 0) { known_mass = Serial.parseFloat(); if (known_mass != 0) { Serial.print("Known mass is: "); Serial.println(known_mass); _resume = true; } } } LoadCell.refreshDataSet(); //refresh the dataset to be sure that the known mass is measured correct float newCalibrationValue = LoadCell.getNewCalibration(known_mass); //get the new calibration value Serial.print("New calibration value has been set to: "); Serial.print(newCalibrationValue); Serial.println(", use this as calibration value (calFactor) in your project sketch."); Serial.print("Save this value to EEPROM adress "); Serial.print(calVal_eepromAdress); Serial.println("? y/n"); _resume = false; while (_resume == false) { if (Serial.available() > 0) { char inByte = Serial.read(); if (inByte == 'y') { #if defined(ESP8266) || defined(ESP32) EEPROM.begin(512); #endif EEPROM.put(calVal_eepromAdress, newCalibrationValue); #if defined(ESP8266) || defined(ESP32) EEPROM.commit(); #endif EEPROM.get(calVal_eepromAdress, newCalibrationValue); Serial.print("Value "); Serial.print(newCalibrationValue); Serial.print(" saved to EEPROM address: "); Serial.println(calVal_eepromAdress); _resume = true; } else if (inByte == 'n') { Serial.println("Value not saved to EEPROM"); _resume = true; } } } Serial.println("End calibration"); Serial.println("***"); Serial.println("To re-calibrate, send 'r' from serial monitor."); Serial.println("For manual edit of the calibration value, send 'c' from serial monitor."); Serial.println("***"); } void changeSavedCalFactor() { float oldCalibrationValue = LoadCell.getCalFactor(); boolean _resume = false; Serial.println("***"); Serial.print("Current value is: "); Serial.println(oldCalibrationValue); Serial.println("Now, send the new value from serial monitor, i.e. 696.0"); float newCalibrationValue; while (_resume == false) { if (Serial.available() > 0) { newCalibrationValue = Serial.parseFloat(); if (newCalibrationValue != 0) { Serial.print("New calibration value is: "); Serial.println(newCalibrationValue); LoadCell.setCalFactor(newCalibrationValue); _resume = true; } } } _resume = false; Serial.print("Save this value to EEPROM adress "); Serial.print(calVal_eepromAdress); Serial.println("? y/n"); while (_resume == false) { if (Serial.available() > 0) { char inByte = Serial.read(); if (inByte == 'y') { #if defined(ESP8266) || defined(ESP32) EEPROM.begin(512); #endif EEPROM.put(calVal_eepromAdress, newCalibrationValue); #if defined(ESP8266) || defined(ESP32) EEPROM.commit(); #endif EEPROM.get(calVal_eepromAdress, newCalibrationValue); Serial.print("Value "); Serial.print(newCalibrationValue); Serial.print(" saved to EEPROM address: "); Serial.println(calVal_eepromAdress); _resume = true; } else if (inByte == 'n') { Serial.println("Value not saved to EEPROM"); _resume = true; } } } Serial.println("End change calibration value"); Serial.println("***"); }
First computer 1959. Retired from my own computer company 2004.
Hardware - Expert in 1401, 360, fairly knowledge in PC plus numerous MPU's & MCU's
Major Languages - Machine language, 360 Macro Assembler, Intel Assembler, PL/I and PL1, Pascal, Basic, C plus numerous job control and scripting languages.
My personal scorecard is now 1 PC hardware fix (circa 1982), 1 open source fix (at age 82), and 2 zero day bugs in a major OS.