![]() The video tutorial below covers the steps from setting up the Arduinp IDE and configuring the Arduino Uno to act as a programmer, through wiring the ATtiny to the Arduino, uploading a test sketch (“blink”, of course) and configuring the ATtiny to use its internal 8 Mhz clock. The awesome guys at the MIT Labs High-Low tech group have created the required file for the ATtiny ICS (ATtiny85, 45, 84 and 44) and provided installation instructions on their site. ![]() As of version 1.6.4 of the Arduino IDE, the “Boards Manager” has been added, which makes adding third party boards (like the ATtiny) much easier. At that time the process of adding new boards to the Arduino IDE was fairly complicated and manual. Works best with the Arduino 1.6.5 IDE or above. Open the preferences dialog in the Arduino software.Find the Additional Boards Manager URLs field near the bottom of the dialog. ![]() In previous posts I covered the steps on programming ATtiny85 and ATtiny84 chips using an Arduino Uno as programmer and the Arduino IDE Software with two different “libraries”. How to program ATtiny's with Arduino UNO: In Arduino 1.6.5 or above, you can install the ATtiny support using the built-in board's manager. ![]()
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