The HDLx-2416 is a neat little four-character ASCII display that just happens to fit, pin-for-pin, on top of a Teensy as if the Teensy were made for it. I snagged one from the DorkbotPDX spare parts bin after Dave showed me how neatly his Yow! project fit together. Of course, while testing the limits of Txtzyme, I had to put a Yow clone together.
VIMEO 13776442 Yow Revisited (in Txtzyme)
I wrote the driver for this part in four steps corresponding to four distinct levels of abstraction required of such an application. These are:
I wrote perl functions for each pin, each register, each method and each application of those methods that make up the demo in the movie. Here are some sample functions pulled from each section of the code:
# HDLx-2416 Pins sub wr_ { tz "4f 0o 1o"; } # HDLx-2416 Registers sub ch { my ($a, $ch) = @_; a $a; cue 0; cu_ 1; d ord($ch); wr_; } # Application Helpers sub txt { my ($t) = @_; for my $i (0..60) { msg (substr $t, $i, 4); tz "_wait_100m" }} # Scroll Application txt "Now is the time for all good men to come to Dorkbot.";
With the rest of the pins, registers, helpers and applications, the program runs a full page. As always, you can find it in the Yow Project page on GitHub.