Controlling fireworks with micropython

Overview

Controlling-fireworks-with-micropython

How the code works


line 1-4

from machine import Pin, I2C
import ds1307
from time import localtime, mktime, sleep

We first import all the necessary libraries. Here is an explanation of the time.mktime() function from the Micropython docs. from Micropython docs:

time.mktime()

This is inverse function of localtime. It’s argument is a full 8-tuple which expresses a time as per localtime. It returns an integer which is the number of seconds since Jan 1, 2000.

The ds1307 is a library used to interface with RTC module. Find it here..


line 6-20

#rtc i2c pins
sda_pin = 26
scl_pin = 27

#pins for 7seg display
digits = (9, 8, 7, 6) #dig 1 2 3 4
segments = (11, 12, 16, 14, 17, 10, 13) # A B C D E F G, dp at Pin 15

#pins to activate relays
rel1 = 18
rel2 = 19

#rtc i2c setup
i2c = I2C(1, sda=Pin(sda_pin), scl=Pin(scl_pin))
ds = ds1307.DS1307(i2c)

We create variables for our circuit configuration. And then initiate the I2C and create a ds1307 class.


line 22-33

#segments values for displaying numbers  
num = {"-": (0,0,0,0,0,0,0),
       "0": (1,1,1,1,1,1,0),
       "1": (0,1,1,0,0,0,0),
       "2": (1,1,0,1,1,0,1),
       "3": (1,1,1,1,0,0,1),
       "4": (0,1,1,0,0,1,1),
       "5": (1,0,1,1,0,1,1),
       "6": (1,0,1,1,1,1,1),
       "7": (1,1,1,0,0,0,0),
       "8": (1,1,1,1,1,1,1),
       "9": (1,1,1,1,0,1,1)}

The tuples store the states (0=OFF, 1=ON) of the LED segments in order order to display each digit. NB: "-" is a blank character which keeps all segments off.


line 35-48

Pin(rel1, mode=Pin.OUT, value=0)
Pin(rel2, mode=Pin.OUT, value=0)

def init():
    #initiate digit pins at HIGH
    for digit in digits:
        Pin(digit, Pin.OUT)
        Pin(digit).on()
    
    #initiate segment pins at LOW
    for seg in segments:
        Pin(digit, Pin.OUT)
        Pin(digit).off()
init()

Relay pins begin as OFF. The init() function takes the display off. For the display to be off, the digit pins should be ON while the segments should be GND.


line 50

deadline = (2022, 1, 2, 17, 41, 0, 0, 0)  #time to countdown to

This value can be changed to a desired date and/or time. It is the target time for the countdown, and it is the 8-tuple time format used in micropython:

(year, month, mday, hour, minute, second, weekday, yearday) ... The format of the entries in the 8-tuple are:

year includes the century (for example 2014).

month is 1-12

mday is 1-31

hour is 0-23

minute is 0-59

second is 0-59

weekday is 0-6 for Mon-Sun

yearday is 1-366


The subsequent code runs inside of a while True loop


line 54

current = localtime() #current = ds.datetime() for RTC

#time difference between the two events/moments in seconds
diff = mktime(deadline) - mktime(current)

First of all, we get the current time either from port when the board is connected, time.localtime(), or from the RTC, ds.datetime().

When we pass the deadline or the current variables into local.mktime(), we get the time, in seconds since the epoch (info about local.mktime() at the top) Mathemetically, by subtracting time-since-epoch of both deadline and current, we get the time difference between deadline and current, hence time to go until its the deadline.


line 59-62

#convert seconds to hours, minutes, seconds
hours, minutes = divmod(diff,3600)
minutes, seconds = divmod(minutes,60)
seconds = int(seconds)

Since the time is in seconds, we have to convert it to total Hours, Minutes, and Seconds. To that, we have to

  1. find the total hours in `diff` by dividing the value by the number seconds in an hour, 3600 seconds. The remainder from this division will give total minutes then seconds
  2. dividing on the remainder with 60 (number of seconds in a minute) gives total minutes. The remainder from this division is the seconds

So how divmod works is that you pass two parameters, the dividend followed by the divisor and the functions returns a tuple: first item is the quotient then the second item is the remainder. Divisor-Dividend-Quotient explained

In this line seconds = int(seconds), we take only the integer of the previous seconds variable, discarding everything behind the decimal point.


line 63-67

#choosing between seconds countdown and HH:MM countdown
if (hours == 0) and (minutes <=1):
    s = f"--{seconds:02d}" 
else:
    s = f"{hours:02d}{minutes:02d}" 

Before the countdown time goes below a minute, the time is displayed as hours and minutes (HHMM), and when it is under a minute, we display seconds (--SS).


line 69-74

for digit in range(4):
    for seg in range(7):
        Pin(segments[seg], mode=Pin.OUT, value=num[str(s[digit])][seg])
    Pin(digits[digit], mode=Pin.OUT, value=0)
    sleep(0.001)
    Pin(digits[digit], mode=Pin.OUT, value=1)
for digit in range(4):
    for seg in range(7):

These loop through every segment of every digit.

Let us break this Pin(segments[seg], mode=Pin.OUT, value=num[str(s[digit])][seg]) down:

  1. `segments[seg]`- The pin number of the segment to be addressed is selected from the `segments` array by using the current counter value as the index.
  2. `mode=Pin.OUT`- The pin is to be an output
  3. `value=num[str(s[digit])][seg]`
      Example, let me explain it with our value of `s` representing 2 hours 30 min: `s = "0230"`
    • `str(s[digit])`-from `s`, we set the position of the digit to handle, indexed by `digit` counter from outer loop. We convert this value to string.
    • `>>> On first run of the loop we will have "0"`
    • `num[str(s[digit])]`-the string we found, we use it as a key to look up the `num` dictionary in order to get the tuple with LED state valus that represent different digits.
    • `>>> For a key of "0", we have the value (1,1,1,1,1,1,0)`
    • `num[str(s[digit])][seg]`-we index the tuple with the current value of seg counter. And the tuple item we get at whatever index will be either 1(ON) or 0(OFF) to define the state of the respective segment.
    • `>>>If seg is equal to 3, then we get a 1 which we assign to the value parameter to turn the segment ON.`
    the loop runs 7 times to appropriately, turn on the 7 segments that make up a digit.

In this line Pin(digits[digit], mode=Pin.OUT, value=0), digits[digit] indexes digits tuple to get the pin number of the digit to control. We set the pin to OFF (or GND) in order to bring the digit on. So these 3 lines Pin(digits[digit], mode=Pin.OUT, value=0), ``sleep(0.001), and Pin(digits[digit], mode=Pin.OUT, value=1)` control the display to show a single digit at a time, and then bring it off before showing another digit individually. The digits on the display appear as if they are all displayed simaltenously instead of individually. This is because thecycle of displaying the digits individually occurs very fast, it runs over each digit in 1 millisecond or 0.001 seconds.


line 76-80

if s == "--00":
    Pin(rel1, mode=Pin.OUT, value=1)
    sleep(2)
    Pin(rel2, mode=Pin.OUT, value=1)
    quit

if we have reached the end of our countdown, i.e time left to deadline is 0, or s is "--00", we turn ON the pins where relays are connected. This sets alight the fireworks. We then quit the whileloop.


line 81 We run the init() function to turn the display off.


To do

  • Documet code
  • Document circuit
  • Explain how the display works
  • Explain the maling of electronic igniters
Owner
Montso Mokake
Python: Micropython, Microcontrollers, MachineLearning.
Montso Mokake
Doughskript interpreter for converting simple command sequences into executable Arduino C++ code.

Doughskript interpreter for converting simple command sequences into executable Arduino C++ code.

Svjatoslav 2 Jan 11, 2022
DNP3 Stalker is a project to analyze and interact with DNP3 devices

DNP3 Stalker Purpose DNP3 Stalker is a project to analyze and interact with DNP3

Cutaway Security, LLC. 2 Feb 10, 2022
A Python script to monitor the latest block on an LCD.

PiHole-Monitoring A Python script to monitor the latest block on a lcd display. The first number represents the dns queries from the last 24h, the sec

Maxi 4 Dec 05, 2022
MPY tool - manage files on devices running MicroPython

mpytool MPY tool - manage files on devices running MicroPython It is an alternative to ampy Target of this project is to make more clean code, faster,

Pavel Revak 5 Aug 17, 2022
Home Assistant custom integration to fetch data from Powerpal

Powerpal custom component for Home Assistant Component to integrate with powerpal. This repository and integration is not affiliated with Powerpal. Th

Lawrence 32 Jan 07, 2023
HACS gives you a powerful UI to handle downloads of all your custom needs.

HACS (Home Assistant Community Store) Manage (Install, track, upgrade) and discover custom elements for Home Assistant directly from the UI. What? HAC

HACS 3.2k Jan 04, 2023
Volta: A Virtual Assistant which increases your productivity with time as you use it…

Volta Official Documentation Overview & Purpose Volta: A Virtual Assistant which increases your productivity with time as you use it… Volta, developed

Abeer Joshi 1 Jan 14, 2022
FHEM Connector for FHT Heating devices

home-assistant-fht from: https://github.com/Rsclub22 FHEM Connector for FHT Heating devices (connected via FHEM) Requires FHEM to work You can find FH

5 Dec 01, 2022
Examples to accompany the

Examples to accompany the "Raspberry Pi Pico Python SDK" book published by Raspberry Pi Trading, which forms part of the technical documentation in support of Raspberry Pi Pico and the MicroPython po

Raspberry Pi 589 Jan 08, 2023
Pylorawan is a Micropython wrapper for lorawan devices from RAK Wireless.

pylorawan Pylorawan is a Micropython wrapper for lorawan devices from RAK Wireless. Tested on a Raspberry PI Pico with a RAK4200(H) Evaluation Board (

Peter Houghton 3 Nov 04, 2022
A install script for installing qtile and my configs on Raspberry Pi OS

QPI OS - Qtile + Raspberry PI OS Qtile + Raspberry Pi OS :) Installation Run this command in the terminal

RPICoder 3 Dec 19, 2021
Vvim - Keyboardless Vim interactions

This is done via a hardware glove that the user wears. The glove detects the finger's positions and translates them into key presses. It's currently a work in progress.

Boyd Kane 8 Nov 17, 2022
A simple Picobot project implemented in Python

Python-Picobot A simple Picobot project implemented in Python About Explanation This is my first programming project. Picobot use rules.txt file which

Shayan Shiravani 0 Apr 03, 2022
A python script for macOS to enable scrolling with the 3M ergonomic mouse EM500GPS in any application.

A python script for macOS to enable scrolling with the 3M ergonomic mouse EM500GPS in any application.

3 Feb 19, 2022
Raspberry Pi Power Button - Wake/Power Off/Restart(Double Press)

Control Raspberry pi with physically attached button. Wake, Power Off, and Restart (Double Press) . Python3 script runs as a service with easy installation.

Stas Yakobov 16 Oct 22, 2022
DOS-like OS for RP2040 basic microcontroller boards

Micropython DOS-like OS for RP2040 microcontroller boards. Check out the demo video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Az_oiq8GE4Y To start the OS typ

RetiredWizard 58 Dec 27, 2022
This Home Assistant custom component adding support for controlling Midea dehumidifiers on local network.

This custom component for Home Assistant adds support for Midea air conditioner and dehumidifier appliances via the local area network. homeassistant-

Nenad Bogojevic 92 Dec 31, 2022
Component for deep integration LedFx from Home Assistant.

LedFX for Home Assistant Component for deep integration LedFx from Home Assistant. Table of Contents FAQ Install Config Performance FAQ Q. What versio

Dmitry Mamontov 28 Dec 13, 2022
Repo for the esp32s2 version of the Wi-Fi Nugget

Repo for the esp32s2 version of the Wi-Fi Nugget

HakCat 30 Nov 05, 2022
The software that powers the sPot: a 4th generation

This code is meant to accompany this project in which a Spotify client is built into an iPod "Classic" from 2004. Everything is meant to run on a Raspberry Pi Zero W.

Guy Dupont 683 Dec 28, 2022