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Evil Genius

30 Arduino Projects for the Evil Genius

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This wickedly inventive guide shows you how to program and build a variety of projects with the Arduino microcontroller development system. Covering Windows, Mac, and Linux platforms, 30 Arduino Projects for the Evil Genius gets you up to speed with the simplified C programming you need to know--no prior programming experience necessary. Using easy-to-find components and equipment, this do-it-yourself book explains how to attach an Arduino board to your computer, program it, and connect electronics to it to create fiendishly fun projects. The only limit is your imagination! 30 Arduino Projects for the Evil

191 pages, Paperback

First published July 28, 2010

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About the author

Simon Monk

91 books25 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
1 review
December 17, 2020
This is an excellent book about arduino. I have written a full article after reading this book. I t enhances my knowledge of arduino.
Profile Image for Ben.
2,729 reviews225 followers
July 22, 2022
I have been getting more-and-more into hacking electronics. This book was a great way to learn some fascinating and fun projects to learn Arduino.
It was fun, light, and playful, but very informative.

Would recommend!

4.4/5
Profile Image for Jim Razinha.
1,501 reviews89 followers
July 5, 2025
Moving on to other things but keeping this nearby should I want to figure out a way to incorporate an Arduino into some of my steampunk creations.
Profile Image for Jeanne Boyarsky.
Author 28 books76 followers
October 9, 2011
“30 Arduino Projects for the Evil Genius” balances theory and practice very well. It starts off assuming you don't know much about programming or hardware, but doesn't bore you if you already do. Chapter 1 starts out with a simple exercise that you can just follow the steps for. Chapter 2 circles back and gives a 10 page tour of Arduino and covers some theory. Don't worry – it is interesting theory.

The rest of the book uses projects to teach more hardware/wiring/program concepts. Each project has a schematic and circuit diagram so you can see what the breadboard looks like They even cover using a third party library.

The Appendix includes the part numbers at Farnell and Radio Shack so you can easily order what you need for each specific project.

I did notice one formatting problem: minus minus shows up as one long dash in the code. But if this is the worst problem, the book is in good shape.

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Disclosure: I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for writing this review on behalf of CodeRanch.
Profile Image for Joel.
461 reviews4 followers
September 3, 2016
There is a lot of great information in this book and it is very clear in its instructions. However, I didn't feel that there was enough in here that wasn't also readily available elsewhere on the internet to warrant the price of the book. Don't get me wrong, the information is valuable and presented clearly, and, for beginners, it is an excellent how-to manual. But it is the sort of thing that is maybe better suited for novices, as a gift, with their first Arduino board.
Profile Image for وردٌ.
114 reviews415 followers
June 13, 2014
Helpful at first, but it quickly becomes repetitive. If learning new ideas is the purpose, this book is overly redundant.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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