Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: smbus2
Version: 0.1.0
Summary: A drop-in replacement for smbus-cffi/smbus-python in pure Python
Home-page: https://github.com/kplindegaard/smbus2
Author: Karl-Petter Lindegaard
Author-email: kp.lindegaard@gmail.com
License: MIT
Description: 
        Introduction
        ------------
        
        smbus2 is (yet another) pure Python implementation of of the [python-smbus](http://www.lm-sensors.org/browser/i2c-tools/trunk/py-smbus/) package.
        
        It was designed from the ground up with two goals in mind:
        
        1. It should be a drop-in replacement of smbus. The syntax shall be the same.
        2. Use the inherent i2c structs and unions to a greater extend than other pure Python implementations like [pysmbus](https://github.com/bjornt/pysmbus) does. By doing so, it will be more feature complete and easier to extend.
        
        Currently supported features are:
        
        * Get i2c capabilities (I2C_FUNCS)
        * read_byte_data
        * write_byte_data
        * read_word_data
        * write_word_data
        * read_i2c_block_data
        * write_i2c_block_data
        
        It is developed on Python 2.7, but should work in Python 3.X too.
        
        Code examples
        -------------
        
        smbus2 installs next to smbus as the package, so it's not really a 100% replacement. You must change the module name.
        
        Example 1a: Read a byte
        
            from smbus2 import SMBus
        
            # Open i2c bus 1 and read one byte from address 80, offset 0
            bus = SMBus(1)
            b = bus.read_byte_data(80, 0)
            print(b)
            bus.close()
        
        Example 1b: Read a byte using 'with'
        
        This is the very same example but safer to use since the smbus will be closed automatically when exiting the while block.
        
            from smbus2 import SMBusWrapper
        
            with SMBusWrapper(1) as bus:
                b = bus.read_byte_data(80, 0)
                print(b)
        
        Example 2: Read a block of data
        
            from smbus2 import SMBusWrapper
        
            with SMBusWrapper(1) as bus:
                # Read a block of 16 bytes from address 80, offset 0
                # Note: You can read up to 32 bytes at once
                block = bus.read_i2c_block_data(80, 0, 16)
                # Returned value is a list of 16 bytes
                print(block)
        
        Example 3: Write a byte
        
            from smbus2 import SMBusWrapper
        
            with SMBusWrapper(1) as bus:
                # Write a byte to address 80, offset 0
                data = 45
                bus.write_byte_data(80, 0, data)
        
        Example 4: Write a block of data
        
        It is possible to write 32 bytes at the time, but I have found that error-prone. Write less and add a delay in between if you run into trouble.
        
            from smbus2 import SMBusWrapper
        
            with SMBusWrapper(1) as bus:
                # Write a block of 8 bytes to address 80 from offset 0
                data = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
                bus.write_i2c_block_data(80, 0, data)
        
Keywords: smbus python i2c raspberrypi linux
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
