From their examples, an I2C Scanner:
Code:
// These are any addresses of the form 000 0xxx or 111 1xxx
bool reserved_addr(uint8_t addr) {
return (addr & 0x78) == 0 || (addr & 0x78) == 0x78;
}
int main() {
// Enable UART so we can print status output
stdio_init_all();
// This example will use I2C0 on GPIO4 (SDA) and GPIO5 (SCL)
i2c_init(i2c0, 100 * 1000);
gpio_set_function(4, GPIO_FUNC_I2C);
gpio_set_function(5, GPIO_FUNC_I2C);
gpio_pull_up(4);
gpio_pull_up(5);
printf("\nI2C Bus Scan\n");
printf(" 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F\n");
for (int addr = 0; addr < (1 << 7); ++addr) {
if (addr % 16 == 0) {
printf("%02x ", addr);
}
// Perform a 1-byte dummy read from the probe address. If a slave
// acknowledges this address, the function returns the number of bytes
// transferred. If the address byte is ignored, the function returns
// -1.
// Skip over any reserved addresses.
int ret;
uint8_t rxdata;
if (reserved_addr(addr))
ret = PICO_ERROR_GENERIC;
else
ret = i2c_read_blocking(i2c0, addr, &rxdata, 1, false);
printf(ret < 0 ? "." : "@");
printf(addr % 16 == 15 ? "\n" : " ");
}
printf("Done.\n");
return 0;
}
Does not look too far away