Something fishy going on with the Markdown for the code examples in the Notes page. Might be down to the indentation of the list item's content? The vim markdown parser seems to think so anyway; let's see what pythonhosted.org says ...
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Notes
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BCM pin numbering
This library uses Broadcom (BCM) pin numbering for the GPIO pins, as opposed to BOARD. Unlike the
RPi.GPIOlibrary, this is not configurable.Any pin marked
GPIOcan be used for generic components.The BCM pin layout is as follows:
3V3 5V GPIO2 5V GPIO3 GND GPIO4 GPIO14 GND GPIO15 GPIO17 GPIO18 GPIO27 GND GPIO22 GPIO23 3V3 GPIO24 GPIO10 GND GPIO9 GPIO25 GPIO11 GPIO8 GND GPIO7 DNC DNC GPIO5 GND GPIO6 GPIO12 GPIO13 GND GPIO19 GPIO16 GPIO26 GPIO20 GND GPIO21 - GND = Ground
- 3V3 = 3.3 Volts
- 5V = 5 Volts
- DNC = Do not connect (special use pins)
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Wiring
All components must be wired up correctly before using with this library.
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Keep your program alive with
signal.pauseThe following program looks like it should turn an LED on:
from gpiozero import led led = LED(2) led.on()And it does, if you're using the Python shell, IPython shell or IDLE shell, but if you saved this program as a Python file and ran it, it would flash on for a moment then the program would end and it would turn off.
The following file includes an intentional
pauseto keep the program alive:from gpiozero import LED from signal import pause led = LED(2) led.on() pause()Now running the program will stay running, leaving the LED on, until it is forced to quit.
Similarly, when setting up callbacks on button presses or other input devices, the program needs to be running for the events to be detected:
from gpiozero import Button from signal import pause button = Button(2) button.when_pressed = lambda: print("Button was pressed!") pause()