The Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express board.
Below is a quick reference for SAMD21/SAMD51-based boards. If it is your first time working with this board it may be useful to get an overview of the microcontroller:
.. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 general.rst tutorial/intro.rst pinout.rst
See the corresponding section of tutorial: :ref:`samd_intro`. It also includes a troubleshooting subsection.
The MicroPython REPL is on the USB port, configured in VCP mode. Tab-completion is useful to find out what methods an object has. Paste mode (Ctrl-E) is useful to paste a large slab of Python code into the REPL.
The :mod:`machine` module:
import machine machine.freq() # get the current frequency of the CPU machine.freq(96_000_000) # set the CPU frequency to 96 MHz
The range accepted by the function call is 1_000_000 to 200_000_000 (1 MHz to 200 MHz) for SAMD51 and 1_000_000 to 54_000_000 (1 MHz to 54 MHz) for SAMD21. The safe range for SAMD51 according to the data sheet is up to 120 MHz, for the SAMD21 up to 48Mhz. Frequencies below 48Mhz are set by dividing 48Mhz by an integer, limiting the number of discrete frequencies to 24Mhz, 16Mhz, 12MHz, and so on. At frequencies below 8 MHz USB will be disabled. Changing the frequency below 48 MHz impacts the baud rates of UART, I2C and SPI. These have to be set again after changing the CPU frequency. The ms and µs timers are not affected by the frequency change.
Use the :mod:`time <time>` module:
import time time.sleep(1) # sleep for 1 second time.sleep_ms(500) # sleep for 500 milliseconds time.sleep_us(10) # sleep for 10 microseconds start = time.ticks_ms() # get millisecond counter delta = time.ticks_diff(time.ticks_ms(), start) # compute time difference
Two groups of functions are provided for time information. All boards have the datetime(), mktime() and time() functions. Boards with a 32kHz crystal also provide an RTC() module. The epoch start date is 1.1.2000.
Use the :mod:`time <time>` module:
import time date_time = time.localtime() # Show the actual date/time information date_time = time.localtime(seconds) # decode the date/time form the seconds value seconds = time.mktime(date_time_tuple) # Convert seconds to a datetime tuple second = time.time() # Return the actual system time.
The format of the date_time tuple follows the standard. The µs value of the date_time tuple is ignored. On boards without the RTC module, time.localtime(seconds) sets the system time. Use of the Use the :mod:`RTC <RTC>` module:
from machine import RTC rtc = RTC() date_time = rtc.datetime() # return the actual date & time. rtc.datetime(date_time_tuple) # Set date & time, ignoring weekday date_time = rtc.now() # Return date & time in Unix order. rtc.calibration(value) # Set a calibration factor
The weekday value set will be ignored and calculated in the returned tuple from the actual date. rtc.now() is only provided at SAMD51 boards. The value used in the rtc.calibration() call has a range from -127 - 127. It defines roughly a ppm quantity, by which the clock can run faster or slower.
The SAMD21/SAMD51 uses software timers. Use the :ref:`machine.Timer <machine.Timer>` class:
from machine import Timer tim0 = Timer() tim0.init(period=5000, mode=Timer.ONE_SHOT, callback=lambda t:print(0)) tim1 = Timer() tim1.init(period=2000, mode=Timer.PERIODIC, callback=lambda t:print(1))
The period is in milliseconds.
Use the :ref:`machine.Pin <machine.Pin>` class:
from machine import Pin p0 = Pin('D0', Pin.OUT) # create output pin on GPIO0 p0.on() # set pin to "on" (high) level p0.off() # set pin to "off" (low) level p0.value(1) # set pin to on/high p2 = Pin('D2', Pin.IN) # create input pin on GPIO2 print(p2.value()) # get value, 0 or 1 p4 = Pin('D4', Pin.IN, Pin.PULL_UP) # enable internal pull-up resistor p7 = Pin('PA07', Pin.OUT, value=1) # set pin high on creation
Pins can be denoted by a string or a number. The string is either the pin label of the respective board, like "D0" or "SDA", or in the form "Pxnn", where x is A,B,C or D, and nn a two digit number in the range 0-31. Examples: "PA03", PD31".
Pin numbers are the MCU port numbers in the range:
PA0..PA31: 0..31 PB0..PB31: 32..63 PC0..PC31: 64..95 PD0..PD31: 96..127
Note: On Adafruit Feather and ItsyBity boards, pin D5 is connected to an external gate output and can therefore only be used as input.
See :ref:`machine.UART <machine.UART>`.
# Use UART 3 on a ItsyBitsy M4 board from machine import UART uart3 = UART(3, tx=Pin('D1'), rx=Pin('D0'), baudrate=115200) uart3.write('hello') # write 5 bytes uart3.read(5) # read up to 5 bytes
The SAMD21/SAMD51 MCUs have up to eight hardware so called SERCOM devices, which can be used as UART, SPI or I2C device, but not every MCU variant and board exposes all TX and RX pins for users. For the assignment of Pins to devices and UART signals, refer to the :ref:`SAMD pinout <samd_pinout>`.
Up to five timer device of the SAMD21/SAMD51 MCUs are used for creating PWM signals.
The PWM functions are provided by the :ref:`machine.PWM <machine.PWM>` class. It supports all basic methods listed for that class.
# Samples for Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express from machine import Pin, PWM # create PWM object from a pin and set the frequency and duty cycle pwm = PWM(Pin('D7'), freq=2000, duty_u16=32768) pwm.freq() # get the current frequency pwm.freq(1000) # set/change the frequency pwm.duty_u16() # get the current duty cycle, range 0-65535 pwm.duty_u16(200) # set the duty cycle, range 0-65535 pwm.deinit() # turn off PWM on the pin pwm # show the PWM objects properties
The methods are identical to the generic :ref:`machine.PWM <machine.PWM>` class, with additional keyword arguments to the init() method, matchings those of the constructor.
Pins are specified in the same way as for the Pin class. For the assignment of Pins to PWM signals, refer to the :ref:`SAMD pinout <samd_pinout>`.
On the SAMD21/SAMD51 ADC functionality is available on Pins labelled 'Ann'.
Use the :ref:`machine.ADC <machine.ADC>` class:
from machine import ADC adc0 = ADC(Pin('A0')) # create ADC object on ADC pin, average=16 adc0.read_u16() # read value, 0-65536 across voltage range 0.0v - 3.3v adc1 = ADC(Pin('A1'), average=1) # create ADC object on ADC pin, average=1
The resolution of the ADC is 12 bit with 12 bit accuracy, irrespective of the value returned by read_u16(). If you need a higher resolution or better accuracy, use an external ADC.
Construct and return a new ADC object using the following parameters:
- dest is the Pin object on which the ADC is output.
Keyword arguments:
average is used to reduce the noise. With a value of 16 the LSB noise is about 1 digit.
vref sets the reference voltage for the ADC.
The default setting is for 3.3V. Other values are:
vref
SAMD21
SAMD51
0
1.0V voltage reference
internal bandgap reference (1V)
1
1/1.48 Analogue voltage supply
Analogue voltage supply
2
1/2 Analogue voltage supply
1/2 Analogue voltage supply
3
External reference A
External reference A
4
External reference B
External reference B
5
External reference C
.. method:: read_u16()
Read a single ADC value as unsigned 16 bit quantity. The voltage range is defined by the vref option of the constructor, the resolutions by the bits option.
The DAC class provides a fast digital to analog conversion. Usage example:
from machine import DAC dac0 = DAC(0) # create DAC object on DAC pin A0 dac0.write(1023) # write value, 0-4095 across voltage range 0.0v - 3.3v dac1 = DAC(1) # create DAC object on DAC pin A1 dac1.write(2000) # write value, 0-4095 across voltage range 0.0v - 3.3v
The resolution of the DAC is 12 bit for SAMD51 and 10 bit for SAMD21. SAMD21 devices have 1 DAC channel at GPIO PA02, SAMD51 devices have 2 DAC channels at GPIO PA02 and PA05.
The vref arguments defines the output voltage range, the callback option is used for dac_timed(). Suitable values for vref are:
vref | SAMD21 | SAMD51 |
---|---|---|
0 | Internal voltage reference | Internal bandgap reference (~1V) |
1 | Analogue voltage supply | Analogue voltage supply |
2 | External reference | Unbuffered external reference |
3 | Buffered external reference |
.. method:: write(value)
Write a single value to the selected DAC output. The value range is 0-1023 for SAMD21 and 0-4095 for SAMD51. The voltage range depends on the vref setting.
Software SPI (using bit-banging) works on all pins, and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SoftSPI <machine.SoftSPI>` class.
from machine import Pin, SoftSPI # construct a SoftSPI bus on the given pins # polarity is the idle state of SCK # phase=0 means sample on the first edge of SCK, phase=1 means the second spi = SoftSPI(baudrate=100000, polarity=1, phase=0, sck=Pin('D7'), mosi=Pin('D9'), miso=Pin('D10')) spi.init(baudrate=200000) # set the baud rate spi.read(10) # read 10 bytes on MISO spi.read(10, 0xff) # read 10 bytes while outputting 0xff on MOSI buf = bytearray(50) # create a buffer spi.readinto(buf) # read into the given buffer (reads 50 bytes in this case) spi.readinto(buf, 0xff) # read into the given buffer and output 0xff on MOSI spi.write(b'12345') # write 5 bytes on MOSI buf = bytearray(4) # create a buffer spi.write_readinto(b'1234', buf) # write to MOSI and read from MISO into the buffer spi.write_readinto(buf, buf) # write buf to MOSI and read MISO back into buf
The highest supported baud rate is 500000.
The SAMD21/SAMD51 MCUs have up to eight hardware so called SERCOM devices, which can be used as UART, SPI or I2C device, but not every MCU variant and board exposes all signal pins for users. Hardware SPI is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SPI <machine.SPI>` class and has the same methods as software SPI above:
from machine import SPI spi = SPI(1, sck=Pin("SCK"), mosi=Pin("MOSI"), miso=Pin("MISO"), baudrate=10000000) spi.write('Hello World')
If miso is not specified, it is not used. For the assignment of Pins to SPI devices and signals, refer to :ref:`SAMD pinout <samd_pinout>`.
Note: Even if the highest reliable baud rate at the moment is about 24 Mhz, setting a baud rate will not always result in exactly that frequency, especially at high baud rates.
Software I2C (using bit-banging) works on all output-capable pins, and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SoftI2C <machine.SoftI2C>` class:
from machine import Pin, SoftI2C i2c = SoftI2C(scl=Pin('D10'), sda=Pin('D11'), freq=100000) i2c.scan() # scan for devices i2c.readfrom(0x3a, 4) # read 4 bytes from device with address 0x3a i2c.writeto(0x3a, '12') # write '12' to device with address 0x3a buf = bytearray(10) # create a buffer with 10 bytes i2c.writeto(0x3a, buf) # write the given buffer to the slave
The highest supported freq is 400000.
The SAMD21/SAMD51 MCUs have up to eight hardware so called SERCOM devices, which can be used as UART, SPI or I2C device, but not every MCU variant and board exposes all signal pins for users. For the assignment of Pins to devices and I2C signals, refer to :ref:`SAMD pinout <samd_pinout>`.
Hardware I2C is accessed via the :ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` class and has the same methods as software SPI above:
from machine import I2C i2c = I2C(2, scl=Pin("SCL"), sda=Pin("SDA"), freq=400_000) i2c.writeto(0x76, b"Hello World")
The OneWire driver is implemented in software and works on all pins:
from machine import Pin import onewire ow = onewire.OneWire(Pin('D12')) # create a OneWire bus on GPIO12 ow.scan() # return a list of devices on the bus ow.reset() # reset the bus ow.readbyte() # read a byte ow.writebyte(0x12) # write a byte on the bus ow.write('123') # write bytes on the bus ow.select_rom(b'12345678') # select a specific device by its ROM code
There is a specific driver for DS18S20 and DS18B20 devices:
import time, ds18x20 ds = ds18x20.DS18X20(ow) roms = ds.scan() ds.convert_temp() time.sleep_ms(750) for rom in roms: print(ds.read_temp(rom))
Be sure to put a 4.7k pull-up resistor on the data line. Note that
the convert_temp()
method must be called each time you want to
sample the temperature.
The DHT driver is implemented in software and works on all pins:
import dht import machine d = dht.DHT11(machine.Pin('D4')) d.measure() d.temperature() # eg. 23 (°C) d.humidity() # eg. 41 (% RH) d = dht.DHT22(machine.Pin('D4')) d.measure() d.temperature() # eg. 23.6 (°C) d.humidity() # eg. 41.3 (% RH)
Be sure to have a 4.7k pull-up resistor on the data line. Some DHT modules may already have one.
The APA102 on some Adafruit boards can be controlled using SoftSPI:
from machine import SoftSPI, Pin # create the SPI object. miso can be any unused pin. spi=SoftSPI(sck=Pin('D25'), mosi=Pin('D26'), miso=Pin('D14')) # define a little function that writes the data with # preamble and postfix def write(red, green, blue): spi.write(b"\x00\x00\x00\x00\xff") spi.write(bytearray((blue, green, red))) spi.write(b"\xff\xff\xff") # set the LED to red write(128, 0, 0)
Since SoftSPI does not allow miso to be undefined, miso has to be assigned to an otherwise unused pin.
The built-in machine.bitstream() method supports driving Neopixel LEDs in combination with the Neopixel driver from the MicroPython driver library:
import neopixel import machine # 1 LED connected to Pin D8 on Adafruit Feather boards p = machine.Pin('D8', machine.Pin.OUT) n = neopixel.NeoPixel(p, 1) # set the led to red. n[0] = (128, 0, 0) # Update the LED. n.write()
machine.bitstream() is set up for a SAMD21 clock frequency of 48MHz and a SAMD51 clock frequency of 120 MHz. At other clock frequencies, the timing will not fit.
Files can be transferred to the SAMD21/SAMD51 devices for instance with the :ref:`mpremote <mpremote>` tool. See the MicroPython forum for community-supported alternatives to transfer files to an SAMD21/SAMD51 board, like rshell or Thonny.