A wrapper around Pimoroni's interstate75 library which allows for running locally and easier testing.
This library provides a module, i75
, which contains additional useful functionality over what is provided by MicroPython
and the Pimoroni libraries. For full details, please read the documentation.
This library also provides a script, i75
, which is used when running programs on a normal PC for testing purposes.
This is done by a set of modules which replicate the functionality of the native Interstate75(W) hardware, in particular
using PyGame to represent a Hub75 LED matrix.
This emulation is far from perfect but hopefully allows a quicker development cycle than deploying to the physical hardware. In particular, problems may include:
- Full Python3.x is used, so syntactic and semantic differences with MicroPython won't be picked up.
- Your PC is many times more powerful than the RP2040 chip, so CPU limits won't be picked up.
- Our emulation of built-in functionality may be incomplete or incorrect.
- Sensors or additional hardware are not emulated.
Any help improving these limitations is most welcome. Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for more details.
To install this library either check it out from GitHub or install it from PyPI.
git checkout https://github.com/andrewjw/i75.git
cd i75
sudo python3 setup.py install
or
pip3 install i75
To run your script simply follow i75
with the path to your script. There are examples provided in the examples
directory, which can be run as follows.
i75 examples/clock/clock.py
To install the library on your Interstate75 run install.sh
. This will create an i75
directory on the Raspberry Pi
Zero, and copy across the required files.
Install your script in the normal way, e.g.
ampy examples/clock/clock.py main.py
For ampy
to work you need to tell it the correct device to use to communicate with Raspberry Pi Pico. To do that either
run install.sh -p /dev/tty.usbmodemN
or set the AMPY_PORT
environment details. For more details about ampy
,
check out their documentation.