Aliased from ItsyBitsy and M4 Express
The ItsyBitsy M4 Express uses the Microchip ATSAMD51 Cortext M4 processor running at 120 MHz, with floating point support and 512KB Flash and 192KB RAM. It's quite tiny, at 35mm long by 18mm wide, and has 6 power pins, 23 digital GPIO pins (7 of which can be analog in, 2 x 1 MSPS analog out DACs, and 18 x PWM out). It has 2MB of SPI Flash memory to contain your program code. It receives both its power and connection to the outside world via a micro USB connection.
See also: Adafruit Metro Mini (a similar board)
The ItsyBitsy can be programmed in CircuitPython, and from AdaFruit comes preinstalled with a CircuitPython UF2 bootloader. You can install an alternative bootloader if you want to program it in some other language, but we're happy with CircuitPython.
The steps are:
If you want to update your code just drag a new version onto the drive. You should see the results immediately as the M4 Express senses a change in the file.
This file, named "code.py" causes the little red LED on the ItsyBitsy to blink:
import board import digitalio import time led = digitalio.DigitalInOut(board.D13) led.direction = digitalio.Direction.OUTPUT while True: led.value = True time.sleep(0.8) # how much time on? led.value = False time.sleep(1.8) # how much time off?
This can be done with Firmata, a protocol not unlike Midi.