In the first .POST on Rpi e-cookery we showed
how to install Raspbian and how to set up our
Raspberry Pi to get us started. As promised last
time, in this part we’ll be looking at the Expansion
Header of the Raspberry Pi and how to program the
GPIO pins we’ll find there. If you’ve read Elektor’s
March 2013 edition some of this may be familiar to you,
as we discussed the Expansion Port in the Raspberry Pi
Prototyping Board article [1].
In the first .POST on Rpi e-cookery we showed
how to install Raspbian and how to set up our
Raspberry Pi to get us started. As promised last
time, in this part we’ll be looking at the Expansion
Header of the Raspberry Pi and how to program the
GPIO pins we’ll find there. If you’ve read Elektor’s
March 2013 edition some of this may be familiar to you,
as we discussed the Expansion Port in the Raspberry Pi
Prototyping Board article [1].
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For hardware hackers everywhere, the Raspberry
Pi Expansion Header has to be the most
exciting thing on the Pi, after the Pi’s stupendously
low cost of course.
You’ll find expansion header in the corner
near the composite video connector. It’s a
hobbyist friendly double row, 13-way 0.1”
(2.54mm) pinheader connector so it makes
interfacing to it easy.
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