KIT:
KIT from AliExpress:
Learn how to use the Microcontroller board, Raspberry PI Pico, read the temperature value from the built-in temperature sensor and display the value on three different displays all at the same time. Those displays are the 7-segment 4 digits display, the 16x2 character display, and the 128x64px OLED display. For today’s lesson, we will be coding in Micropython, but you can also write your code in C (same as with Arduino). Connecting the displays is simple, as (same as many other sensors in the kit), most of them use an I2C connection and require only two wires - clock (SCL - serial clock) and data (SDA - serial data). In addition, you need two wires for the power supply - VCC (power) and GND (ground).
This lesson is for absolute beginners who have no experience with Micropython, Raspberry PI Pico, or displays. Every step is described and explained. If you still have any problems following the tutorial, please put your question in the comments, and I will try to answer as soon as possible.
Also, this kit has quite so many sensors, but I´m actually not using any in this lesson. Let me know if I should use more sensors in the next video?
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Tags:
#raspberrypi #oled #arduino
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Links from the video:
7-segment digit library -
16x2 library -
OLED documentation -
Photopea -
Image2CPP -
Getting bits from bytes -
Read temperature from built-in sensor -
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Keywords related to this video:
Elecrow, Raspberry PI, Raspberry PI Pico, Micropython, Arduino, Thonny, Python, Display, 7-segment display, 16x2 Character Display, 1602 Display, 128x64 OLED Display, OLED Display, OLED display project, SSD1306, SSD1309, multiple displays, Photopea, pixel art, custom characters, LED, blinking LED, iot, sensors, I2C, time display, clock, temperature sensor, temperature, OLED draw image, GPIO, simple, DIY, tutorial