The following instructions walk through setup needed to complete this tutorial.
For this tutorial, participants will want to install Mu editor.
Windows users may install Mu from here.
Mac users may install Mu from here.
Linux users must be running Python 3.6 or newer. Install by running sudo apt install python3
.
Then, install pip3
by running sudo apt install python3-pip
.
Next, create a virtual environment: python3.6 -m venv pyohiocp
. Follow the instructions to
install venv
if it is not already installed. To activate the virtual environment, run
source ~/pyohiocp/bin/activate
. Once inside the virtual environment (pyohiocp)
, install Mu
by running pip3 install mu-editor
.
Linux users must add their user to the dialout
group to access the serial console output. From
the command line, run nano /etc/group
. Find the line with dialout:
and add your user to the
end of the line, after a comma with no space, i.e. dialout:foo,your_user
. Then, log out of the
user and log back in for the change to take affect.
To run Mu on Windows, double-click the icon.
To run Mu on Mac, double-click the icon in the Applications folder.
To run Mu on Linux, from inside the virtual environment, type python3 -m mu
into the
command line.
Once Mu is opened, it will present a list of options. For this tutorial, choose "Adafruit CircuitPython".
If there is no CircuitPython compatible board plugged in when the editor is opened, there will be a dialog box that starts with "Could not find an attached Adafruit CircuitPython device". This is normal.
This repo contains all the code used in the tutorial. To access it during the tutorial,
you may view it on the web as you follow along. You may wish to have the files available
locally. To do this, install git
and clone the repo to your machine using
git clone https://github.com/kattni/pyohio_2018_cp
to create a directory containing the
contents of the repo.