Pic: Your Personal Introductory Course
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3 new or used available from CDN$ 26.00
Average customer review:Product Description
John Morton offers a uniquely concise and practical guide to getting up and running with the PIC Microcontroller. The PIC is one of the most popular of the microcontrollers that are transforming electronic project work and product design, and this book is the ideal introduction for students, teachers, technicians and electronics enthusiasts.Assuming no prior knowledge of microcontrollers and introducing the PICs capabilities through simple projects, this book is ideal for use in schools and colleges. The step-by-step explanations make it ideal for self-study too: this is not a reference book - you start work with the PIC straight away. The revised second edition covers the popular reprogrammable EEPROM PICs: P16C84/P16F84 as well as the P54 and P71 families.Demystifies the leading microcontroller for students and techniciansEmphasis on putting the PIC to work, not theoretical microelectronicsA practical introduction to the world of microcontrollers
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #897894 in Books
- Published on: 2001-05-29
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Very useful book which will provide a vital reference source to students studying PIC Microcontrollers. Good read, well laid out, good price
Book Info
A collection of graded projects designed to help readers discover the potential of the PIC microcontroller, and getting up and running. Assumes no prior knowledge of PIC microcontrollers and offers step-by-step explanations, making it accessible to those interested in self-study as well as college and university students. Softcover. Previous edition: c1998.
Customer Reviews
Very little knowledge of electronics needed to understand..
I have a degree in Mechanical Engineering and needed to use microcontrollers to control things in various design projects. This book explained the PIC so well that I now use it where I never though possible before. This book is a must for anyone wanting to learn how to use a PIC, even if you don't have a strong background in electronics (very basic knowledge required to build your own circuits). Even my buddy Twigs could learn using this book.
Wonderful Intro to Pics
I found this book to be very useful in learning quickly how to program PICmicros in general terms. The author goes from the basics of boolean logic and base-2 and base-16 number systems introductions all the way to analog-to-digital conversion and how to write to the eeprom of the 16C84. The important thing to remember if you are considering writing this book is that he covers three of the "early" PIC models, but the newer models have inherited qualities of these models. For instance the 16C84 led to the 16F84 which has now led to the 16F628.
I work in an electronic manufacturing services company, so I see a lot of PICs on boards that we manufacture, but haven't had the opportunity to see how the programs were written until now. One individual complained that he referenced "blowing" the PIC. This is not an uncommon term I've heard used for programming chips, since PALS, PLAs, PROMS and many other programmable chips are programmed by actually blowing fuses in the chip. While this is no longer the case with PICs (I don't think), the term I'm sure is still valid.
He includes a large number of examples, excersizes (with the answers to all in back), gotchas, and how-to's. There are numerous sample programs for each topic. A++++
Easy to understand~! Great Book
I have read serveral books on the PicMCU and this is by far the best one I had read. The other ones by Myke Predko are very confusing and are very repetitive whereas this book is straight to the point and it really gives reader a very clear understanding of the basics.
