Hello forum 
I am looking for an answer to a very fundamental question.. I think!
I have played with eletronics lots over the years, but never have gotten properly into it as a hobby, because I have failed to fully get my head around understanding circuit diagrams.. I guess I am the sort of person who HAS to understand how it works, and they never quite make sense to me so I don't progress
They don't make sense because, I think, I don't understand the concepts of how eletricity moves around the circuit. I will try to explain exactly what I don't get using the attached Arduino diagram:
Two connections go to GND. But when there is more than one path to ground, how does a component such as the resistor in this Arduino diagram have any effect? I could understand if it was connected to the bottom of the Arduino, but the way I am looking at it, I see it connected directly to + live (when button pressed) and therefore I expect the electricity to go into pin 7 on the Arduino, and the resistor is just sort of sitting in the middle.. either that or the electricity goes into pin 7 and through the resistor, eith/both ways still going to ground.
My best answer is that as the electricity has to flow back from GND to +, it does so through this resistor, thus resiting the current through pin 7? But if so, why does it do that? Does it take the path of least resistence, ie through pin 7, pin 7 has a diode (or software equivalent) connected so it, so current must flow through the resitor?
Sorry, pretty long winded there, but if anyone has the kindness and patience to help me, I would greatly appriciate it! Thank you people
I am looking for an answer to a very fundamental question.. I think!
I have played with eletronics lots over the years, but never have gotten properly into it as a hobby, because I have failed to fully get my head around understanding circuit diagrams.. I guess I am the sort of person who HAS to understand how it works, and they never quite make sense to me so I don't progress
They don't make sense because, I think, I don't understand the concepts of how eletricity moves around the circuit. I will try to explain exactly what I don't get using the attached Arduino diagram:
Two connections go to GND. But when there is more than one path to ground, how does a component such as the resistor in this Arduino diagram have any effect? I could understand if it was connected to the bottom of the Arduino, but the way I am looking at it, I see it connected directly to + live (when button pressed) and therefore I expect the electricity to go into pin 7 on the Arduino, and the resistor is just sort of sitting in the middle.. either that or the electricity goes into pin 7 and through the resistor, eith/both ways still going to ground.
My best answer is that as the electricity has to flow back from GND to +, it does so through this resistor, thus resiting the current through pin 7? But if so, why does it do that? Does it take the path of least resistence, ie through pin 7, pin 7 has a diode (or software equivalent) connected so it, so current must flow through the resitor?
Sorry, pretty long winded there, but if anyone has the kindness and patience to help me, I would greatly appriciate it! Thank you people