Just a few additional components are needed to turn a Raspberry Pi into a DC voltmeter capable of reading up to 5 V and displaying the results in color on a monitor. The entire display area can be used, which makes the project an ideal basis for demonstrations, for example in schools.
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czecht@gmail.com 4 jaar geleden
Tony
Darek Sliwa 4 jaar geleden
Andre Carrera 4 jaar geleden
www.elektor.com/110483
www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tlc549.pdf
www.elektor.com/130383
czecht@gmail.com 4 jaar geleden
Richard Cooke 4 jaar geleden
MARC DELINCE 4 jaar geleden
Link 1: very short search provides
The 3 part "From BASIC to Python" is availabvle to members at:
part 1 - https://www.elektormagazine.com/magazine/elektor-201305/20592
part 2 - https://www.elektormagazine.com/magazine/elektor-201306/20746
part 3 - https://www.elektormagazine.com/magazine/elektor-201309/23334
Link 2:
The TLC549 is EOL and was already an "antique" when the article was written. There are many replacement parts alas none are pin-for-pin with equivalent specs.
Link 3:
http://www.elektor.com/130383 (not https)
David Glass 4 jaar geleden
TheEditor 4 jaar geleden
not: embedded code
Content Director, Elektor 3 jaar geleden
https://www.elektormagazine.com/magazine/elektor-201305/20592.