yes, if you can get a switch or button in there its much easier...
ok unhook buzzer and Ldr,
put meter on pin 3 and ground...
test resistor for resistance,
hook up resistor to pin 6,
hook up other wire on resistor to 9v ...
check pin3 ...
now take resistor from 9v and hook up to ground
check pin3 ...
..... this will test the chip
... if chip works then hook up buzzer and do test again
yes, if you can get a switch or button in there its much easier...
ok unhook buzzer and Ldr,
put meter on pin 3 and ground...
test resistor for resistance,
hook up resistor to pin 6,
hook up other wire on resistor to 9v ...
check pin3 ...
now take resistor from 9v and hook up to ground
check pin3 ...
..... this will test the chip
... if chip works then hook up buzzer and do test again
Some breadboards have break in the "power" busses, some don't. In other words if this is a about a 3" x 8" bread board with two
busses" on the top and bottom. Those 2 busses might actually be 6. The outer two traces Corner to corner on the long edge is not continuous.
NOTE:
To Switch high power devices such as Relay, speakers etc use transistors to turn it on by drawing power directly rather than sourcing it from 555.
You need R1. It's not a critical value. During the time the output is going off, there is a momentary short through the timer ground to Vcc. This could definitely degrade the timer.