PIC Microcontroller
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[ PICKit 3 Debug Express [1] PIC Microcontroller,
a family of microcontrollers (MCUs) with a Harvard architecture design, made by Microchip Technology, derived from the 1976 ancestor, the Programmable Interface Controller PIC1650 developed by General Instrument [2]. The PIC family includes various 8, 16 and 32-bit controllers with 12, 14, 16, or 24 bit instructions, flash memory ( EEPROM), RAM, parallel I/O-ports, DMA, serial communication, ADC and DAC, and further peripherals such as timer, interrupt controller and PWM devices for motor control.
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See also
Manuals
- Microchip (2009). 16-bit MCU and DSC Programmer’s Reference Manual. (pdf)
- Microchip (2009). PIC24F Family Reference Manual - Section 17. 10-Bit A/D Converter. pdf
- Microchip (2012). PIC24F Family Reference Manual - Section 62. 10-bit Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC). pdf
Publications
- Lucio Di Jasio (2011). Programming 16-Bit PIC Microcontrollers in C, Learning to Fly the PIC 24. Elsevier, 2nd edition from amazom [5]
External Links
- PIC microcontroller from Wikipedia
- 16-bit PIC® Microcontrollers
- MPLAB from Wikipedia
- MPLAB- X IDE | Microchip Technology Inc.
- PICkit from Wikipedia
- A Guide To PIC Microcontroller Documentation - Wikibooks
- PIC micro controller board, PIC micro controller projects, and PIC microcontroller tutorials
- PIC Microcontrollers Tutorials
- Introduction to the 16-bit PIC24F Microcontroller Family, YouTube Video
References
- ↑ PICKit 3 Debug Express with demo board, Image by Glossywhite, February 01, 2011, Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ PIC microcontroller from Wikipedia
- ↑ Microchip (2009). 16-bit MCU and DSC Programmer’s Reference Manual. (pdf)
- ↑ Microchip PIC Family Reference Manuals - Compiled - Microcontroller - eewiki
- ↑ luciodj / FlyingPIC24 / source / — Bitbucket
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