docs/esp8266: Consistently replace Pin.high/low methods with .on/off.

This commit is contained in:
Paul Sokolovsky 2017-05-30 07:36:25 +03:00
parent d5b8825d5f
commit 272a5d95e0
3 changed files with 9 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -107,8 +107,8 @@ Use the :ref:`machine.Pin <machine.Pin>` class::
from machine import Pin
p0 = Pin(0, Pin.OUT) # create output pin on GPIO0
p0.high() # set pin to high
p0.low() # set pin to low
p0.on() # turn on pin, set to high
p0.off() # turn off pin, set to low
p0.value(1) # set pin to high
p2 = Pin(2, Pin.IN) # create input pin on GPIO2

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@ -35,8 +35,8 @@ Then set its value using::
Or::
>>> pin.low()
>>> pin.high()
>>> pin.off()
>>> pin.on()
External interrupts
-------------------

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@ -101,11 +101,12 @@ turn it on and off using the following code::
>>> import machine
>>> pin = machine.Pin(2, machine.Pin.OUT)
>>> pin.high()
>>> pin.low()
>>> pin.on()
>>> pin.off()
Note that ``high`` might turn the LED off and ``low`` might turn it on (or vice
versa), depending on how the LED is wired on your board.
Note that ``on`` method of a Pin might turn the LED off and ``off`` might
turn it on (or vice versa), depending on how the LED is wired on your board.
To resolve this, machine.Signal class is provided.
Line editing
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