docs: Replace master/slave with controller/peripheral in I2C and SPI.

See https://www.oshwa.org/a-resolution-to-redefine-spi-signal-names
This commit is contained in:
David P
2021-06-12 14:51:05 +10:00
committed by Damien George
parent cbc8d5b61f
commit fdd5b18133
12 changed files with 86 additions and 86 deletions

View File

@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ To set the volume, define the following function::
import pyb
def volume(val):
pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.MASTER).mem_write(val, 46, 0)
pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.CONTROLLER).mem_write(val, 46, 0)
Then you can do::

View File

@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ MPR121 capacitive touch sensor has address 90.
To get started, try::
>>> import pyb
>>> i2c = pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.MASTER)
>>> i2c = pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.CONTROLLER)
>>> i2c.mem_write(4, 90, 0x5e)
>>> touch = i2c.mem_read(1, 90, 0)[0]
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ directory or ``lib/`` directory) and then try::
>>> import pyb
>>> import mpr121
>>> m = mpr121.MPR121(pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.MASTER))
>>> m = mpr121.MPR121(pyb.I2C(1, pyb.I2C.CONTROLLER))
>>> for i in range(100):
... print(m.touch_status())
... pyb.delay(100)
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ Try touching each one in turn.
Note that if you put the LCD skin in the Y-position, then you need to
initialise the I2C bus using::
>>> m = mpr121.MPR121(pyb.I2C(2, pyb.I2C.MASTER))
>>> m = mpr121.MPR121(pyb.I2C(2, pyb.I2C.CONTROLLER))
There is also a demo which uses the LCD and the touch sensors together,
and can be found `here <http://micropython.org/resources/examples/lcddemo.py>`__.