Book Image

Internet of Things with Python

By : Gaston C. Hillar
Book Image

Internet of Things with Python

By: Gaston C. Hillar

Overview of this book

Internet of Things (IoT) is revolutionizing the way devices/things interact with each other. And when you have IoT with Python on your side, you'll be able to build interactive objects and design them. This book lets you stay at the forefront of cutting-edge research on IoT. We'll open up the possibilities using tools that enable you to interact with the world, such as Intel Galileo Gen 2, sensors, and other hardware. You will learn how to read, write, and convert digital values to generate analog output by programming Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) in Python. You will get familiar with the complex communication system included in the board, so you can interact with any shield, actuator, or sensor. Later on, you will not only see how to work with data received from the sensors, but also perform actions by sending them to a specific shield. You'll be able to connect your IoT device to the entire world, by integrating WiFi, Bluetooth, and Internet settings. With everything ready, you will see how to work in real time on your IoT device using the MQTT protocol in python. By the end of the book, you will be able to develop IoT prototypes with Python, libraries, and tools.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Internet of Things with Python
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Displaying text on an LCD display


The upm library includes support for the 16x2 LCD RGB backlight breakout board in the pyupm_i2clcd module. The Jhd1313m1 class declared in this module represents a 16x2 LCD display and its RGB backlight, connected to our board. The class makes it easy to set the color components for the RGB backlight, clear the LCD display, specify the cursor location, and write text through the I2C bus. The class works with the mraa.I2c class under the hoods to talk with the RGB backlight and the LCD display. These two devices act as slave devices connected to the I2C bus, and therefore, each of them have a specific address in this bus.

We will take the code we wrote in the previous chapter when we read temperature and humidity values from the sensor and we will use this code as a baseline to add the new features. The code file for the sample was iot_python_chapter_07_05.py.

We will create an Lcd class to represent the 16x2 LCD RGB backlight and make it easier for us to set...