Difference between revisions of "LCD1602 Module"

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(The Experiment for Arduino)
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- 1 * USB cable<br>
 
- 1 * USB cable<br>
 
- Jumper wires<br>
 
- Jumper wires<br>
 +
  
 
'''<font color="green">Experimental Procedures</font><br>
 
'''<font color="green">Experimental Procedures</font><br>
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<font color="red">Note: you may need to adjust the potentiometer on the LCD1602 until it can display clearly.</font><br>
 
<font color="red">Note: you may need to adjust the potentiometer on the LCD1602 until it can display clearly.</font><br>
 
You should now see the characters "SunFounder" and "hello, world! " rolling on the LCD.<br>
 
You should now see the characters "SunFounder" and "hello, world! " rolling on the LCD.<br>
 
 
  
 
==The Experiment for Raspberry Pi==
 
==The Experiment for Raspberry Pi==

Revision as of 02:59, 12 June 2017

Introduction

LCD1602, or 1602 character-type liquid crystal display, is a kind of dot matrix module to show letters, numbers, and characters and so on. It's composed of 5x7 or 5x11 dot matrix positions; each position can display one character. There's a dot pitch between two characters and a space between lines, thus separating characters and lines. The number 1602 means on the display, 2 rows can be showed and 16 characters in each.
Generally, LCD1602 has parallel ports, that is, it would control several pins at the same time. LCD1602 can be categorized into eight-port and four-port connections. If the eight-port connection is used, then all the digital ports of the SunFounder Uno board are almost completely occupied. If you want to connect more sensors, there will be no ports available. Therefore, the four-port connection is used here for better application.

Pins of LCD1602 and their functions

The Experiment for Arduino

Components
- 1 * SunFounder Uno board
- 1 * Breadboard
- 1 * LCD1602
- 1 * Potentiometer (50kΩ)
- 1 * USB cable
- Jumper wires


Experimental Procedures
Note: before connecting circuit, need to plug the pin headers onto a breadboard, and then put the LCD1602 on to it for easy soldering.


Step 1: Build the circuit (make sure the pins are connected correctly. Otherwise, characters will not be displayed properly):


Step 2: Download the package LCD1602_for_Arduino, then unzip it and open the LCD1602.ino File


Step 3: Select correct Board and Port
Step 4: Upload the sketch to the SunFounder Uno board

Experimental phenomenon
Note: you may need to adjust the potentiometer on the LCD1602 until it can display clearly.
You should now see the characters "SunFounder" and "hello, world! " rolling on the LCD.

The Experiment for Raspberry Pi

Components
- 1 * Raspberry Pi
- 1 * Breadboard
- 1 * LCD1602
- 1 * Potentiometer
- Jumper wires

Experimental Procedures
Step 1: Build the circuit (please be sure the pins are connected correctly. Otherwise, characters will not be displayed properly):


Note: After you run the code, characters may not appear on the LCD1602. You need to adjust the contrast of the screen (the gradual change from black to white) by spinning the potentiometer clockwise or anticlockwise, until the screen displays characters clearly.

Step 2: Transfer the package LCD1602_for_Raspberry_Pi to the Raspberry Pi

wget http://wiki.sunfounder.cc/images/8/87/LCD1602_for_Raspberry_Pi.zip

Step 3: Extract the package

unzip LCD1602_for_Raspberry_Pi.zip

(For C language users)
Step 4: Get into the folder of code

cd LCD1602_for_Raspberry_Pi/C

Step 5: Compile

gcc lcd1602.c –o lcd1602 –lwiringPiDev –lwiringPi

Step 6: Run

sudo ./lcd1602

(For Python users)
Step 4: Get into the folder of code

cd LCD1602_for_Raspberry_Pi/Python

Step 5: Run

sudo python lcd1602.py

Experimental Phenomenon
You should see two lines of characters displayed on the LCD1602: “hello, world! ” , “SunFounder”.


Resource

LCD1602_for_ArduinoZIP.jpg
LCD1602_for_Raspberry_PiZIP.jpg