commit | 6ae3e5b52e5a6636ff87e1654dbd3115ac7699b6 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Philip Howard <phil@gadgetoid.com> | Tue May 21 22:48:41 2013 +0100 |
committer | Philip Howard <phil@gadgetoid.com> | Tue May 21 22:48:41 2013 +0100 |
tree | a02242a6514767d18be851021d7cb2cee4b81928 | |
parent | 17c28c2a4843e18872ec8992e1eebeb5c1cd4148 [diff] |
Function bindings for all the things
WiringPi 2 for Python
WiringPi: An implementation of most of the Arduino Wiring functions for the Raspberry Pi
WiringPi2: WiringPi version 2 implements new functions for managing IO expanders.
Testing: Build with gcc version 4.6.3 (Debian 4.6.3-14+rpi1) Built against Python 2.7.2, Python 3.2.3
Prerequisites: You must have python-dev and python-setuptools installed If you manually rebuild the bindings with swig -python wiringpi.i
Get/setup repo: git clone https://github.com/Gadgetoid/WiringPi2-Python.git cd WiringPi2-Python
Build & install with: sudo python setup.py install
Or Python 3 sudo python3 setup.py install
Class-based Usage: Description incoming!
Usage:
import wiringpi2 wiringpi2.wiringPiSetup // For sequential pin numbering, one of these MUST be called before using IO functions OR wiringpi2.wiringPiSetupSys // For /sys/class/gpio with GPIO pin numbering OR wiringpi2.wiringPiSetupGpio // For GPIO pin numbering
Setting up IO expanders (This example was tested on a quick2wire board with one digital IO expansion board connected via I2C):
wiringpi2.mcp23017Setup(65,0x20) wiringpi2.pinMode(65,1) wiringpi2.digitalWrite(65,1)
General IO:
wiringpi2.pinMode(1,1) // Set pin 1 to output wiringpi2.digitalWrite(1,1) // Write 1 HIGH to pin 1 wiringpi2.digitalRead(1) // Read pin 1
Setting up a peripheral: WiringPi2 supports expanding your range of available "pins" by setting up a port expander. The implementation details of your port expander will be handled transparently, and you can write to the additional pins ( starting from PIN_OFFSET >= 64 ) as if they were normal pins on the Pi.
wiringpi2.mcp23017Setup(PIN_OFFSET,I2C_ADDR)
Soft Tone
Hook a speaker up to your Pi and generate music with softTone. Also useful for generating frequencies for other uses such as modulating A/C.
wiringpi2.softToneCreate(PIN) wiringpi2.softToneWrite(PIN,FREQUENCY)
Bit shifting:
wiringpi2.shiftOut(1,2,0,123) // Shift out 123 (b1110110, byte 0-255) to data pin 1, clock pin 2
Serial:
serial = wiringpi2.serialOpen('/dev/ttyAMA0',9600) // Requires device/baud and returns an ID wiringpi2.serialPuts(serial,"hello") wiringpi2.serialClose(serial) // Pass in ID
Full details at: http://www.wiringpi.com