I'm programming the Atmega328P in embedded C. I'm going to use 16 pins for turning on LEDs, and I have to use PORTB, PORTD and PORTC for this. I would like to just iterate a pointer so I can turn them on/off instead having to deal with what port each pin relates to. So an example would be how I need three if statements to iterate through the 16 pins like shown below: ``` // Enable outputs DDRB = 0b00111111; // 6 outputs DDRC = 0b00110000; // 2 outputs DDRD = 0xFF; // 8 outputs // LED pins uint8_t ledpin[] = {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15}; uint8_t idx = 0; // Set LEDs if (idx < 8) for(int i = 0; i < 8; i++) PORTD |= (1 << ledpin[i]); if( idx > 8 && idx < 14) for(int i = 8; i < 14 ; i++) PORTB |= (1 << ledpin[i]); if (idx >= 14) for(int i = 14; i < 16; i++) PORTC |= (1 << ledpin[i]); ``` I would rather use a memory map where I could just say "pin0 address + offset" like this: ``` // Base address of ports uint8_t base 0x00 uint8_t offset = 0x04; // LED pins uint8_t ledpin[] = {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15}; // Set LEDs for(int i = 0; i < 16; i++); 0x00 + offset (1 << ledpin[i]); // Pseudo code ``` The code above is obviously not optimized, nor totally functioning code but I think it gets my point accross as to what I want to achieve. Ultimately I will use this in a code to control a LED cube which will work quite differently, but it's essential that I don't need to decode what port each pin belong to all the time. Is there a good way to solve this with virtually no overhead?