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

Interfacing an analog-to-digital convertor to interface any analog sensor with the RPZ


The Raspberry Pi Zero GPIO is a great interface, but it does lack the analog ports you would find on something like an Arduino. We can use PWM to utilize analog devices over the digital ports, like we did with the first photoresistor recipe, or we can add an analog-to-digital convertor (ADC) to our circuit. As you can probably guess, the ADC will read the voltage and convert it into a digital signal that the Raspberry Pi understands natively. The MCP3008 analog-to-digital convertor will handle up to eight analog signals and report back over the SPI interface. Let's get started!

Getting ready

We will use the MCP3008 ADC. Along with that, you'll need the following:

  • One photoresistor (the one used in the earlier recipe is fine)

  • One thermistor

  • Two 10K resistors

Note

You can add more analog sensors to this recipe as you'd like, up to eight of them! I used two different sensors to give you an idea. The MCP3008 is a...