What can you do with Raspberry Pi, the inexpensive credit card-sized computer? All sorts of things! If you're learning how to program, or looking to build new electronic projects, this hands-on guide will show you just how valuable this flexible little platform can be. This book takes you step-by-st
Make: Getting Started with Raspberry Pi: Electronic Projects with the Low-Cost Pocket-Sized Computer
β Scribed by Matt Richardson, Shawn Wallace
- Publisher
- Maker Media, Inc
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 200
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
What can you do with the Raspberry Pi, the inexpensive credit card-sized computer? All sorts of things! If you're learning how to program, or looking to build new electronic projects, this hands-on guide will show you just how valuable this flexible little platform can be.
This book takes you step-by-step through fun and educational possibilities. Write programs in Scratch and Python. Use the Raspberry Pi with Arduino. Create Internet-connected projects. Play with multimedia. With Raspberry Pi, you can do all of this and more.
- Get acquainted with hardware features of the Raspberry Pi
- Learn enough Linux to move around the operating system
- Draw graphics, play sounds, and handle mouse events with the Pygame framework
- Use the input and output pins to do some hardware hacking
- Discover how Arduino and the Raspberry Pi complement each other
- Integrate webcams and the Raspberry Pi Camera Module into your projects
- Create your own Pi-based web server with Python
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
To build electronic projects that can sense the physical world, you need to build circuits based around sensors: electronic components that react to physical phenomena by sending an electrical signal. Even with only basic electronic components, you can build useful and educational sensor projects.<b
To build electronic projects that can sense the physical world, you need to build circuits based around sensors: electronic components that react to physical phenomena by sending an electrical signal. Even with only basic electronic components, you can build useful and educational sensor projects.
<b>Get the most out of your new Raspberry Pi</b> While it may sound more like a delicacy, the Raspberry Pi is, in fact, a computer β one that promises a world of interesting and intriguing possibilities. If you are reading this, chances are that you may already know this much. Maybe you heard abo
What can you do with the Raspberry Pi, a $35 computer the size of a credit card? All sorts of things! If youβre learning how to program, or looking to build new electronic projects, this hands-on guide will show you just how valuable this flexible little platform can be. This book takes you step-by