could you write the code for an arduino controller that will at the press of a button, turn on an LED, wait 3 seconds and turn it off ?
That sounds fun; I'd be happy to! A 'blink' sketch is a common example used for learning how to program an Arduino controller, and so is using a pushbutton to control a light. Keeping an LED on for three seconds at the press of a button is a combination of the two:

```c++
/*
  Button Blink

  Turns an LED on for three seconds, then off, 
  after the press of a pushbutton attached to pin 2.

  The circuit:
  - LED attached from pin 13 to ground through 220 ohm resistor
  - pushbutton attached to pin 2 from +5V
  - 10K resistor attached to pin 2 from ground

  Note: On most Arduinos there is already an LED on the board attached to pin 13.
  If you want to know what pin the on-board LED is connected to on your Arduino
  model, check the Technical Specs of your board at:
  https://www.arduino.cc/en/Main/Products
*/

// constants won't change. They're used here to set pin numbers:
const int buttonPin = 2;  // the number of the pushbutton pin
const int ledPin = 13;    // the number of the LED pin

// variables will change:
int buttonState = 0;  // variable for reading the pushbutton status

// the setup function runs once when you press reset or power the board
void setup() {
  // initialize the LED pin as an output:
  pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
  // initialize the pushbutton pin as an input:
  pinMode(buttonPin, INPUT);
}

// the loop function runs over and over again forever
void loop() {
  // read the state of the pushbutton value:
  buttonState = digitalRead(buttonPin);

  // check if the pushbutton is pressed. If it is, the buttonState is HIGH:
  if (buttonState == HIGH) {
      digitalWrite(ledPin, HIGH);  // turn the LED on (HIGH is the voltage level)
      delay(3000);                      // wait for three seconds
      digitalWrite(ledPin, LOW);   // turn the LED off by making the voltage LOW
  }
}
```

Blinking an LED according to input is a great way to test that your Arduino is working, and a good starting point for more complex projects. Getting hardware and software to work together can be difficult, so don't give up! 💡