Book Image

Practical Python Programming for IoT

By : Gary Smart
Book Image

Practical Python Programming for IoT

By: Gary Smart

Overview of this book

The age of connected devices is here, be it fitness bands or smart homes. It's now more important than ever to understand how hardware components interact with the internet to collect and analyze user data. The Internet of Things (IoT), combined with the popular open source language Python, can be used to build powerful and intelligent IoT systems with intuitive interfaces. This book consists of three parts, with the first focusing on the "Internet" component of IoT. You'll get to grips with end-to-end IoT app development to control an LED over the internet, before learning how to build RESTful APIs, WebSocket APIs, and MQTT services in Python. The second part delves into the fundamentals behind electronics and GPIO interfacing. As you progress to the last part, you'll focus on the "Things" aspect of IoT, where you will learn how to connect and control a range of electronic sensors and actuators using Python. You'll also explore a variety of topics, such as motor control, ultrasonic sensors, and temperature measurement. Finally, you'll get up to speed with advanced IoT programming techniques in Python, integrate with IoT visualization and automation platforms, and build a comprehensive IoT project. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed with IoT development and have the knowledge you need to build sophisticated IoT systems using Python.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Programming with Python and the Raspberry Pi
6
Section 2: Practical Electronics for Interacting with the Physical World
9
Section 3: IoT Playground - Practical Examples to Interact with the Physical World

Visualizing software and hardware-timed PWM

Our code examples from the previous sections, Using PWM to control an LED, and Visually exploring PWM with PiScope, both created a PWM signal using your Raspberry Pi's PWM hardware. Accompanying the code for this chapter and listed in the following table are alternative implementations that demonstrate the use of hardware-timed and software-generated PWM signals. You may recall that we discussed these alternatives back in the section entitled Creating PWM signals:

File

Details

pwm_hardware.py

This is hardware PWM using PiGPIO (this is the code we've seen in this chapter). You must use a PWM hardware GPIO pin 12, 13, 18, or 19.

pwm_hardware_timed.py

This is a hardware-timed PWM using PiGPIO. This will work with any GPIO pin.

pwm_software.py

This is software PWM using RPi.GPIO (PiGPIO does not provide software PWM). This will work with any GPIO pin.

 

Functionally...