Buying PICkit-2
Learn about PIC12F629
This project is a mini “GAMES CONSOLE.”
It comes with two games and the idea is to create more of your own games by looking at the programs we have provided and work from there.
The games have been written in “assembly” and this is the “lowest” or “simplest” way to write a program. It may not be the “easiest,” but it is the only way to teach PIC programming.
Hand-coding in assembly uses the 35 instructions that come with the PIC micro and these instructions are all you need to get it to perform all its operations (capabilities).
We could write the program in “C” or PICbasic” or some other form of programming language but this would put you at “arms length” with PIC chips as the instructions would not be PIC instructions.
Writing in assembly is the starting-point to learning to create a program.
It will only take a few days to learn the 36 instructions as they are not difficult to remember.
They are called mnemonics and this means they consist of letters of a word or the first letter of a number of words.
Examples are: btf
(bit test file) decfsz
(decrement file and skip the next instruction if not zero).
We have also made programming easy by providing a library of routines so you can “cut and paste.”
If you follow our suggestion of adding a few instructions at a time or one sub-routine at a time, you cannot go wrong. This is the way we create programs and it saves a lot of frustration. If something does not work, the last few lines are at fault.
There are a number of debugging tools and single-stepping routines, but they all take skill to operate and they can finish up more frustrating than following our method.
The basic circuit:
DUAL LED 5X7 DISPLAY
The PIC micro is constantly executing 1 million instructions per second and you can put it in a loop and do nothing or create lots of interesting effects on a 5x7 Display.
There are two ways to get “things’” to appear on the display.
The first method is to “dump” or “illuminate” one or more pixels (LEDs) on the screen by accessing the associated row and column connections.
It is not possible to illuminate some combinations of LEDs as other LEDs will also illuminate at the same time.
So, this method is limited to a few combinations.
The transistors driving the LEDs have current limiting resistors (not fully shown in the diagram above) and these are designed to deliver a high current for the scan routine. If we turn on a single LED or just a few LEDs, they will appear extra bright - via the DUMP method. This can be avoided by pulsing the LEDs, and will be discussed later.
The solution to illuminating ANY combination of LEDs (there are 70 LEDs) is to turn on one column at a time and if this is done very fast, we can illuminate the whole screen. This is called a “Persistence Of Vision” trick. It’s the same as the frames of a movie film producing movement on a cinema screen. The eye holds or retains an image for a short period of time after the image has extinguished and this allows us to illuminate the display.
A complete column of LED are illuminated at the same time and this can be up to 14 LEDs. As can be seen from the diagram above, if the red line is taken HIGH and the 4017 is reset, then clocked so that the first output is HIGH, the transistor will connect the cathode of the red and green LEDs to the 0v rail and the red LED will illuminate.
If both red and green LEDs are activated, the result will be yellow (orange).
At the same time, any or all the red and green LEDs in the first column can be activated.
The required LEDs are illuminated for a very short period of time and then turned off.
The 4017 is clocked so that the next output connects the second column to the 0v rail and the required LEDs are activated via the 14 lines from the PIC chip.
This process is repeated very quickly so that all the LEDs can be activated.
If we produce a sub-routine to do this, we can illuminate any combination of LEDs.
Even if we are illuminating one LED, the sub-routine can be called and it will produce a blank (black) screen in which only one LED is illuminated.
This sub-routine is called the SCAN routine. In our case the scan routine is called a RASTER routine.
A raster is the white screen produced on a TV when no channel is selected. It may be speckled due to “snow” or noise being picked up.
In our case the RASTER is produced by a sub-routine taking data from files 60h to 66h to produce the red pixels and files 70h to 76h for the green pixels.
To make it easy to illuminate pixels on the screen, we have only used the 5 lower bits of each file. If the 7 files for each colour are laid out as shown in the diagram below, the bits correspond directly to the pixels on the display. By making a bit = 1, the corresponding LED is illuminated.
Each output line of the PIC chip is capable of delivering 25mA. To illuminate the display in multiplex or “scan” mode, we need to deliver slightly more than 25mA to each LED as we are only illuminating it for 20% of the time.
If we deliver 40mA for 20% duration, this works out as 5mA on a constant basis. But LEDs do not work on a linear scale and neither does your eye.
A LED delivered 40mA for 20% duration will appear brighter than one being delivered 5mA on a constant basis and this is why multiplexing is so successful.
But a PIC chip cannot deliver 40mA so we need buffer transistors. The same applies to the CD 4017. It can only deliver about 10mA per output and it also needs a set of buffer transistors.
The Raster sub-routine does only one thing. It takes the data from the 14 files and puts it on the screen. This is done very quickly so that you cannot see any flickering. In fact only one column is displayed at a time but by scanning very quickly (faster than 100 times per second) it appears that all LEDs are illuminated at the same time.
It’s the same with the raster on a TV set. The screen is illuminated by a single dot moving across the screen very quickly and producing more than 625 lines to fill the screen.
The direction of scan has been chosen so that bit 0 can be sent to the display and then the files are shifted right so bit1 is in bit0 location and can be sent to the display.
After 8 shifts, the files are back to their original value for the next scan of the display.
At the beginning of each scan, bits in each file are “1” to represent an illuminated LED. Before the scan is started, we can manipulate the bits by moving or shifting them within the file or to another file in the set of Ghost Files and when the scan sub-routine is performed, the pixels will appear to move.
There is a requirement called SYNCHRONISATION. The output of the CD 4017 must be known by the micro so that the correct LEDs will be illuminated on the display.
The CD4017 is clocked by the PIC chip but it must know which output is active at the beginning of the scan cycle.
We do not have sufficient lines from the micro for a reset line so an ingenious alternative is to connect one of the outputs of the CD 4017 to the input line of the PIC and clock the CD 4017 until this output is detected.
The micro now knows the state of the CD 4017 and every 10 clock pulses will bring it to the same state.
You will notice the PIC16F628 has two lines that are not fully input/output. These are RA4 and RA5. RA4 only pulls down and must be pulled high via a resistor. RA5 is input only.
The board has 6 buttons. Four control the direction of the “cursor” and the centre button has been called FIRE. The extra button can be programmed for any other application.
The circuit diagram above does not show all the componentry and does not show how the buttons are detected.
The buttons are “polled” (looked-at) during the scan routine where the in-out lines of the PIC are converted to input and if one of the buttons is pushed, it will be detected as a LOW.
The software can detect two buttons at the same time and a sub-routine can be written to detect the press of a button before the project is turned on. It actually detects the press of a button at the absolute instant of turn-on. You can also detect repeat pressing or a code made up of a sequence.
The possibilities with this simple display are endless. The display will produce a number of colours including red, green and orange and you can illuminate any combination of LEDs via the scanning routine.
This will give you the capability of producing simple attack games, strategy games or something new.
When we thought everything had been invented, along came the Rubik’s cube and Tetris.
One area that has not been addressed is the birthday present from an Auntie. The auntie will generally want to post the present and it needs to be small and thin for easy posting.
This game is ideal. There is also a demand for games for children in hospital and lots of other occasions.
The secret is to produce something that grabs the players attention and nothing is better than “playing against the computer.”
Games like “Reversi,” “Simon,” “Tic Tac Toe,” “21 Pegs,” are all possible.
Talking Electronics has been producing simple games for over 30 years and one of our readers Cameron Shepherd, started by producing a “space Invaders” game for our Z-80 computer. He then went on to produce games for Nintendo and now has his own software company based in the UK.
There is still a market for games that can be easily posted. Nothing fills this “niche” at the moment.
Be the first.
Programming a game of strategy requires the highest level of thinking as you need to create sub-routines that take all possibilities into account. It’s only by covering all possibilities, that a computer appears to have “intelligence.”
Writing a program for a game is like writing a book. You need to get all your facts together and work out what you want to do.
Obviously the limitation of the game is decided by the 5x7 set of “pixels” but since these can be 1-of-3 colours or flashing, the end-result can be quite impressive.
Before you do anything, read through the programs we have developed and see how the sub-routines perform particular functions.
You will be using many of the pre-written sub-routines and it’s just a matter of starting with the scan sub-routine and loading the Ghost Files with data for the start of a game.
To create movement or “animation” you will be calling the scan sub-routine a number of times before the display is updated.
This will give you the speed of the fastest object. Slow objects will call the scan sub-routine less frequently.
Minefield-1 is a simple memory game.
The display is set up with 4 mines and these are turned off after 3 seconds. Your object is to traverse the whole display without touching any of the mines. You can cheat by pressing the “Fire” button and seeing where you have travelled and where the mines are located.
You can go over any location more than once to fulfill your task.
This is the reverse of Minefield-1. You are required to throw a hand-grenade at each mine and blow it up. Guide the hand-grenade by pressing the 4 direction buttons and press “fire” when the grenade is in position.
Quick Links
Legal Stuff
Social Media