Sujet : Re: RP400 40-pin connector
De : jjlarkin (at) *nospam* highlandtechnology.com (John Larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.design comp.sys.raspberry-piDate : 11. Aug 2024, 21:59:36
Autres entêtes
Organisation : highland technology
Message-ID : <u29ibj5vrgievu9lbvqmthavn4bguj9h8h@4ax.com>
References : 1 2
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On Sun, 11 Aug 2024 16:22:04 -0400, "Edward Rawde"
<
invalid@invalid.invalid> wrote:
"John Larkin" <jjlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote in message news:d21ibjdvt6odqium3ado62ob1e7sa6n9hc@4ax.com...
I want to use an Raspberry Pi 400 (the keyboard thing) as the
dev/debug system for an RP2040 based product.
>
https://www.amazon.com/Raspberry-Computer-Keyboard-Layout-Kabel/dp/B08QCQVWH2
>
It has a 40-pin connector on the back. Various sources say that pins 1
>
This connector?
https://www.pi4j.com/1.3/images/pi4j-rpi-400-pinout.png
Yes.
>
3 and 5 are either GPIO ports 8 9 and 7 or maybe 2 3 and 4.
>
Sometimes the pins are labeled WPI and BCM. Wot's that?
>
https://www.amazon.com/Coolwell-Waveshare-Raspberry-Adapter-Expansion/dp/B08RZCR7S8
>
If that's just a connector then continuity check it to the above drawing of the connector on the Pi.
The real question is whether pin 3 is GPIO8 or GPIO2, and which two
pins are the SW debug.
On the Pi4, pin 3 is GPIO2. It seems like the pins are renamed on the
Pi 400, where pin 3 is GPIO8. Why would they do that?