17. OLED Display(EF05016)¶
17.1. Introduction¶
It is an OLED display to show the data that you want to print. (Chinese is not supported)
17.2. Products Link¶
17.3. Characteristic¶
Designed in RJ11 connections, easy to plug.
17.4. Specification¶
Item | Parameter :-: | :-: SKU|EF05016 Connection|RJ11 Type of Connection|IIC Working Voltage|3.3V Size|0.96 Resolution Ratio|128×64
17.5. Outlook¶
17.6. Quick to Start¶
17.6.1. Materials Required and Diagram¶
Connect the OLED module to IIC port in the Nezha expansion board as the picture shows.
17.7. MakeCode Programming¶
17.7.1. Step 1¶
Click “Advanced” in the MakeCode drawer to see more choices.
We need to add a package for programming, . Click “Extensions” in the bottom of the drawer and search with “PlanetX” in the dialogue box to download it.
Note: If you met a tip indicating that the codebase will be deleted due to incompatibility, you may continue as the tips say or build a new project in the menu.
17.7.2. Step 2¶
17.7.3. Code as below:¶
17.7.4. Link¶
Link: https://makecode.microbit.org/_giYhpKcXTEVg
You may also download it directly below:
17.7.5. Result¶
The numbers set display on the OLED screen.
17.8. Python Programming¶
17.8.1. Step 1¶
Download the package and unzip it: PlanetX_MicroPython
Go to Python editor
We need to add oled.py for programming. Click “Load/Save” and then click “Show Files (1)” to see more choices, click “Add file” to add oled.py from the unzipped package of PlanetX_MicroPython.
17.8.2. Step 2¶
17.8.3. Reference¶
from microbit import *
from oled import *
display = OLED1306()
display.set_text(0, 0, "hello")
17.8.4. Result¶
The OLED screen displays “Hello” after powering on.