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You're reading from  Creative DIY Microcontroller Projects with TinyGo and WebAssembly

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Published inMay 2021
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781800560208
Edition1st Edition
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Tobias Theel
Tobias Theel
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Tobias Theel

Tobias Theel works as the Technical Lead and DevOps for a German FinTech startup fino and since 2020 he has also started working for RegTech startup, ClariLab, as Lead Software Engineer. Being a software architect and an expert for Go and TinyGo alongside C# and Java, he is also iSAQB certified. Theel is a highly enthusiastic community contributor and is among the top 10% responders in C# and Unity3D as well as top 20% responders in .NET, Go, and Visual Studio on StackOverflow. When not programming for fino or ClariLab, he can be found developing games, mainly at game jams such as the Ludum Dare Jam, where he develops games from scratch within 72 hours. As an active speaker at tech talks and a participant for numerous hackathons, Theel loves to share his knowledge of software development with fellow enthusiasts.
Read more about Tobias Theel

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Requesting data from the microcontroller

We might want to know if the light is currently turned on or off inside the living room, without having to walk all the way into the room. So, it would be great if the Wasm app could request the status of the light and display it.

Now, let's imagine we have one or multiple microcontrollers in different rooms, listening to messages. For this example, we do not want the microcontroller to continuously report the state of the light as this would cause unnecessary network traffic. So, we go on and send a message to request the data. The microcontrollers are subscribed to the status topic and get the message delivered. After receiving the status request, they answer it by each sending a status message.

This process is represented in the following diagram:

Figure 8.6 – Architecture diagram

In order to implement that behavior, one microcontroller is sufficient. So, let's go on and update our code accordingly...

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Creative DIY Microcontroller Projects with TinyGo and WebAssembly
Published in: May 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781800560208

Author (1)

author image
Tobias Theel

Tobias Theel works as the Technical Lead and DevOps for a German FinTech startup fino and since 2020 he has also started working for RegTech startup, ClariLab, as Lead Software Engineer. Being a software architect and an expert for Go and TinyGo alongside C# and Java, he is also iSAQB certified. Theel is a highly enthusiastic community contributor and is among the top 10% responders in C# and Unity3D as well as top 20% responders in .NET, Go, and Visual Studio on StackOverflow. When not programming for fino or ClariLab, he can be found developing games, mainly at game jams such as the Ludum Dare Jam, where he develops games from scratch within 72 hours. As an active speaker at tech talks and a participant for numerous hackathons, Theel loves to share his knowledge of software development with fellow enthusiasts.
Read more about Tobias Theel