Book Image

Raspberry Pi Zero Cookbook

Book Image

Raspberry Pi Zero Cookbook

Overview of this book

The Raspberry Pi Zero, one of the most inexpensive, fully-functional computers available, is a powerful and revolutionary product developed by the Raspberry Pi Foundation. The Raspberry Pi Zero opens up a new world for the makers out there. This book will give you expertise with the Raspberry Pi Zero, providing all the necessary recipes that will get you up and running. In this book, you will learn how to prepare your own circuits rather than buying the expensive add–ons available in the market. We start by showing you how to set up and manage the Pi Zero and then move on to configuring the hardware, running it with Linux, and programming it with Python scripts. Later, we integrate the Raspberry Pi Zero with sensors, motors, and other hardware. You will also get hands-on with interesting projects in media centers, IoT, and more.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Raspberry Pi Zero Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Extracting a zipped file and zipping it back


Another way to reduce your overall file size footprint is by using techniques for archiving and compressing one or many files into a single, relatively small file. There are several ways to do this, which we will explore in this recipe.

Getting ready

Stay in the terminal, return to being the pi user, and go to your /home/pi/share/ch3 directory. If you followed the recipe on using wget, you should have a Star Trek ZIP file in there named sstsrc.zip. You can find it using the ls command. If you didn't download it before, first make sure you have zip installed, and then grab your zip file using the commands below:

sudo apt-get install zip

    cd /home/pi/share/ch3/


wget http://www.almy.us/files/sstsrc.zip

How to do it...

The sstsrc.zip file is known as a source file; it contains the code to compile a program on any machine. We're going to unzip this file and compile it to run on our Raspberry Pi Zero! Then, we are going to take our compiled code...