213 lines
7.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
213 lines
7.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Getting a MicroPython REPL prompt
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=================================
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REPL stands for Read Evaluate Print Loop, and is the name given to the
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interactive MicroPython prompt that you can access on the ESP8266. Using the
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REPL is by far the easiest way to test out your code and run commands.
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There are two ways to access the REPL: either via a wired connection through the
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UART serial port, or via WiFi.
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REPL over the serial port
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-------------------------
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The REPL is always available on the UART0 serial peripheral, which is connected
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to the pins GPIO1 for TX and GPIO3 for RX. The baudrate of the REPL is 115200.
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If your board has a USB-serial converter on it then you should be able to access
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the REPL directly from your PC. Otherwise you will need to have a way of
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communicating with the UART.
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To access the prompt over USB-serial you need to use a terminal emulator program.
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On Windows TeraTerm is a good choice, on Mac you can use the built-in ``screen``
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program, and Linux has ``picocom`` and ``minicom``. Of course, there are many
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other terminal programs that will work, so pick your favourite!
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For example, on Linux you can try running::
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picocom /dev/ttyUSB0 -b115200
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Once you have made the connection over the serial port you can test if it is
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working by hitting enter a few times. You should see the Python REPL prompt,
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indicated by ``>>>``.
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WebREPL - a prompt over WiFi
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----------------------------
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WebREPL allows you to use the Python prompt over WiFi, connecting through a
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browser. The latest versions of Firefox and Chrome are supported.
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For your convenience, WebREPL client is hosted at
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`<http://micropython.org/webrepl>`__. Alternatively, you can install it
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locally from the the GitHub repository
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`<https://github.com/micropython/webrepl>`__.
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Before connecting to WebREPL, you should set a password and enable it via
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a normal serial connection. Initial versions of MicroPython for ESP8266
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came with WebREPL automatically enabled on the boot and with the
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ability to set a password via WiFi on the first connection, but as WebREPL
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was becoming more widely known and popular, the initial setup has switched
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to a wired connection for improved security::
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import webrepl_setup
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Follow the on-screen instructions and prompts. To make any changes active,
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you will need to reboot your device.
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To use WebREPL connect your computer to the ESP8266's access point
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(MicroPython-xxxxxx, see the previous section about this). If you have
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already reconfigured your ESP8266 to connect to a router then you can
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skip this part.
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Once you are on the same network as the ESP8266 you click the "Connect" button
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(if you are connecting via a router then you may need to change the IP address,
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by default the IP address is correct when connected to the ESP8266's access
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point). If the connection succeeds then you should see a password prompt.
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Once you type the password configured at the setup step above, press Enter once
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more and you should get a prompt looking like ``>>>``. You can now start
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typing Python commands!
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Using the REPL
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--------------
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Once you have a prompt you can start experimenting! Anything you type at the
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prompt will be executed after you press the Enter key. MicroPython will run
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the code that you enter and print the result (if there is one). If there is an
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error with the text that you enter then an error message is printed.
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Try typing the following at the prompt::
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>>> print('hello esp8266!')
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hello esp8266!
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Note that you shouldn't type the ``>>>`` arrows, they are there to indicate that
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you should type the text after it at the prompt. And then the line following is
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what the device should respond with. In the end, once you have entered the text
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``print("hello esp8266!")`` and pressed the Enter key, the output on your screen
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should look exactly like it does above.
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If you already know some python you can now try some basic commands here. For
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example::
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>>> 1 + 2
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3
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>>> 1 / 2
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0.5
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>>> 12**34
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4922235242952026704037113243122008064
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If your board has an LED attached to GPIO2 (the ESP-12 modules do) then you can
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turn it on and off using the following code::
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>>> import machine
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>>> pin = machine.Pin(2, machine.Pin.OUT)
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>>> pin.on()
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>>> pin.off()
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Note that ``on`` method of a Pin might turn the LED off and ``off`` might
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turn it on (or vice versa), depending on how the LED is wired on your board.
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To resolve this, machine.Signal class is provided.
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Line editing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can edit the current line that you are entering using the left and right
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arrow keys to move the cursor, as well as the delete and backspace keys. Also,
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pressing Home or ctrl-A moves the cursor to the start of the line, and pressing
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End or ctrl-E moves to the end of the line.
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Input history
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The REPL remembers a certain number of previous lines of text that you entered
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(up to 8 on the ESP8266). To recall previous lines use the up and down arrow
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keys.
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Tab completion
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Pressing the Tab key will do an auto-completion of the current word that you are
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entering. This can be very useful to find out functions and methods that a
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module or object has. Try it out by typing "ma" and then pressing Tab. It
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should complete to "machine" (assuming you imported machine in the above
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example). Then type "." and press Tab again to see a list of all the functions
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that the machine module has.
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Line continuation and auto-indent
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Certain things that you type will need "continuing", that is, will need more
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lines of text to make a proper Python statement. In this case the prompt will
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change to ``...`` and the cursor will auto-indent the correct amount so you can
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start typing the next line straight away. Try this by defining the following
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function::
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>>> def toggle(p):
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... p.value(not p.value())
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...
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...
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...
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>>>
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In the above, you needed to press the Enter key three times in a row to finish
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the compound statement (that's the three lines with just dots on them). The
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other way to finish a compound statement is to press backspace to get to the
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start of the line, then press the Enter key. (If you did something wrong and
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want to escape the continuation mode then press ctrl-C; all lines will be
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ignored.)
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The function you just defined allows you to toggle a pin. The pin object you
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created earlier should still exist (recreate it if it doesn't) and you can
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toggle the LED using::
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>>> toggle(pin)
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Let's now toggle the LED in a loop (if you don't have an LED then you can just
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print some text instead of calling toggle, to see the effect)::
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>>> import time
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>>> while True:
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... toggle(pin)
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... time.sleep_ms(500)
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...
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...
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...
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>>>
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This will toggle the LED at 1Hz (half a second on, half a second off). To stop
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the toggling press ctrl-C, which will raise a KeyboardInterrupt exception and
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break out of the loop.
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The time module provides some useful functions for making delays and doing
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timing. Use tab completion to find out what they are and play around with them!
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Paste mode
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~~~~~~~~~~
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Pressing ctrl-E will enter a special paste mode. This allows you to copy and
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paste a chunk of text into the REPL. If you press ctrl-E you will see the
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paste-mode prompt::
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paste mode; Ctrl-C to cancel, Ctrl-D to finish
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===
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You can then paste (or type) your text in. Note that none of the special keys
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or commands work in paste mode (eg Tab or backspace), they are just accepted
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as-is. Press ctrl-D to finish entering the text and execute it.
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Other control commands
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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There are four other control commands:
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* Ctrl-A on a blank line will enter raw REPL mode. This is like a permanent
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paste mode, except that characters are not echoed back.
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* Ctrl-B on a blank like goes to normal REPL mode.
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* Ctrl-C cancels any input, or interrupts the currently running code.
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* Ctrl-D on a blank line will do a soft reset.
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Note that ctrl-A and ctrl-D do not work with WebREPL.
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