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Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

You're reading from   Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico Build autonomous robots with the versatile low-cost Raspberry Pi Pico controller and Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246079
Length 400 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Danny Staple Danny Staple
Author Profile Icon Danny Staple
Danny Staple
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Basics – Preparing for Robotics with Raspberry Pi Pico
2. Chapter 1: Planning a Robot with Raspberry Pi Pico FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Preparing Raspberry Pi Pico 4. Chapter 3: Designing a Robot Chassis in FreeCAD 5. Chapter 4: Building a Robot around Pico 6. Chapter 5: Driving Motors with Raspberry Pi Pico 7. Part 2: Interfacing Raspberry Pi Pico with Simple Sensors and Outputs
8. Chapter 6: Measuring Movement with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico 9. Chapter 7: Planning and Shopping for More Devices 10. Chapter 8: Sensing Distances to Detect Objects with Pico 11. Chapter 9: Teleoperating a Raspberry Pi Pico Robot with Bluetooth LE 12. Part 3: Adding More Robotic Behaviors to Raspberry Pi Pico
13. Chapter 10: Using the PID Algorithm to Follow Walls 14. Chapter 11: Controlling Motion with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico 15. Chapter 12: Detecting Orientation with an IMU on Raspberry Pi Pico 16. Chapter 13: Determining Position Using Monte Carlo Localization 17. Chapter 14: Continuing Your Journey – Your Next Robot 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introduction to I2C communication

You encountered I2C communication in earlier chapters. Chapter 1, discussed how I2C is a data bus that carries address information, allowing a primary device such as Raspberry Pi Pico to reach multiple devices on a single bus. We learned then that Raspberry Pi Pico has two hardware I2C buses. I2C (or I2C) is an acronym for Inter-Integrated Circuit.

In Chapter 7, Planning and Shopping for More Devices, we saw how we would be using I2C devices both for VL53L1X distance sensors along with an IMU.

How exactly does this bus work? Chapter 1, also mentioned that I2C has two wires – a Serial Clock line (SCL) and a Serial Data line (SDA). The following picture shows how devices send signals through them:

Figure 8.4 – I2C signals on the wire

The preceding diagram shows two graphs representing I2C signals. The horizontal axis is time, and the vertical axis when high is logic one, with low being logic zero. As shown...

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