Arduino Serial Byte Array

I am establishing a serial connection with my Arduino. In order to get data from it I have to send data in the form of byte arrays. I am able to send the command and read the ACK. But I can't figur.

Basically String type variable in arduino is character array, Conversion of string to character array can be done using simple toCharArray() function. Getting string value in character array is useful when you want to break single string into parts or get part of string.

Generally, strings are terminated with a null character (ASCII code 0). This allows functions (like Serial.print()) to tell where the end of a string is. Otherwise, they would continue reading subsequent bytes of memory that aren’t actually part of the string.

This means that your string needs to have space for one more character than the text you want it to contain. That is why Str2 and Str5 need to be eight characters, even though “arduino” is only seven – the last position is automatically filled with a null character. Str4 will be automatically sized to eight characters, one for the extra null. In Str3, we’ve explicitly included the null character (written ‘0’) ourselves.

toCharArray(buf, len);

Copies the string’s characters to the supplied buffer.

Syntax

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Stringstr='This is my string';
// Length (with one extra character for the null terminator)
charchar_array[str_len];
// Copy it over

What I use ?

As I mention in first line Arduino String variable is char array. You can directly operate on string like a char array.

Example:

The total length can be established by using the sizeof operator. For example:

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myString.reserve(50);// reserve 50 characters
Serial.println(myString.capacity());// prints: 50

Main Difference between char array and String is we define length to char array, string are dynamic and null terminated to identify its end.

Related

Description

An array is a collection of variables that are accessed with an index number. Arrays in the C++ programming language Arduino sketches are written in can be complicated, but using simple arrays is relatively straightforward.

Creating (Declaring) an Array

All of the methods below are valid ways to create (declare) an array.

You can declare an array without initializing it as in myInts.
In myPins we declare an array without explicitly choosing a size. The compiler counts the elements and creates an array of the appropriate size.
Finally you can both initialize and size your array, as in mySensVals. Note that when declaring an array of type char, one more element than your initialization is required, to hold the required null character.

Accessing an Array

Arrays are zero indexed, that is, referring to the array initialization above, the first element of the array is at index 0, hence

mySensVals[0] 2, mySensVals[1] 4, and so forth.

Arduino Serial Byte Array Example

It also means that in an array with ten elements, index nine is the last element. Hence:

For this reason you should be careful in accessing arrays. Accessing past the end of an array (using an index number greater than your declared array size - 1) is reading from memory that is in use for other purposes. Reading from these locations is probably not going to do much except yield invalid data. Writing to random memory locations is definitely a bad idea and can often lead to unhappy results such as crashes or program malfunction. This can also be a difficult bug to track down.

Unlike BASIC or JAVA, the C++ compiler does no checking to see if array access is within legal bounds of the array size that you have declared.

To assign a value to an array:

To retrieve a value from an array:

Int

Arduino Serial Byte Array Number

x = mySensVals[4];

Arrays and FOR Loops

Arduino Serial Byte Array Converter

Arrays are often manipulated inside for loops, where the loop counter is used as the index for each array element. For example, to print the elements of an array over the serial port, you could do something like this: