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RP2350-One User Guide

Overview

Introduction

The RP2350-One is a mini RP2350 development board, equipped with a PCB USB-A male connector, allowing for true plug-and-play without the concern of cables
All unoccupied pins are brought out in a tiny size, and the PCB edge uses castellated processing, making it easy and quick to integrate into projects

PS: The USB interface of individual customers is relatively loose, and the sticker provided with this product can be used to secure the USB interface at the back logo

Features

  • Adopts RP2350A microcontroller chip designed by Raspberry Pi in the United Kingdom
  • Adopts unique dual-core and dual-architecture design, equipped with dual-core ARM Cortex-M33 processor and dual-core Hazard3 RISC-V core processor, flexible clock running up to 150 MHz
  • Built-in 520KB of SRAM and 4MB of on-chip Flash
  • Equipped with a PCB USB-A male connector, allowing for true plug-and-play without the concern of cables
  • Castellated module allows soldering directly to carrier boards
  • USB1.1 host and device support
  • Supports low-power sleep and hibernation modes
  • Drag-and-drop downloads can be made by USB recognition as mass storage
  • 29 GPIO pins of RP2350A (20 can be led out through pin headers, the rest can be led out only by soldering)
  • Multiple hardware peripherals
    • SPI × 2
    • I2C × 2
    • UART × 2
    • 12-bit ADC × 4
    • Controllable PWM channel × 16
  • Accurate clock and timer on-chip
  • Temperature sensor
  • Accelerated floating-point libraries on-chip
  • 12 × Programmable I/O (PIO) state machines for custom peripheral support

Pinout Definition

Dimensions

Pico Getting Started

Text tutorial

Introduction

Raspberry Pi Pico Basics

MicroPython series

Install Thonny IDE

In order to facilitate the development of Pico/Pico2 boards using MicroPython on a computer, it is recommended to download the Thonny IDE

  • Download Thonny IDE and follow the steps to install, the installation packages are all Windows versions, please refer to Thonny's official website for other versions
  • After installation, the language and motherboard environment need to be configured for the first use. Since we are using Pico/Pico2, we select the Raspberry Pi option for the motherboard environment


  • Configure MicroPython environment and choose Pico/Pico2 port
    • Connect Pico/Pico2 to your computer first, and in the lower right corner of Thonny left-click on the configuration environment option --> select Configture interpreter
    • In the pop-up window, select MicroPython (Raspberry Pi Pico), and choose the corresponding port

  • Click OK to return to the Thonny main interface, download the corresponding firmware library and burn it to the device, and then click the Stop button to display the current environment in the Shell window
  • How to download the firmware library for Pico/Pico2 in windows: After holding down the BOOT button and connecting to the computer, release the BOOT button, a removable disk will appear on the computer, copy the firmware library into it
  • How to download the firmware library for RP2040/RP2350 in windows: After connecting to the computer, press the BOOT key and the RESET key at the same time, release the RESET key first and then release the BOOT key, a removable disk will appear on the computer, copy the firmware library into it (you can also use the Pico/Pico2 method)

Details

C/C++ series

For C/C++, it is recommended to use Pico VS Code for development. This is a Microsoft Visual Studio Code extension designed to make it easier for you to create, develop, and debug projects for the Raspberry Pi Pico series development boards. No matter if you are a beginner or an experienced professional, this tool can assist you in developing Pico with confidence and ease. Here's how to install and use the extension.

  • Official website tutorial: https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/pico-vscode-extension/
  • This tutorial is applicable to Raspberry Pi Pico, Pico2 and the RP2040 and RP2350 series development boards developed by our company
  • The default development environment is Windows. For other environments, please refer to the official website tutorial for installation

Install VSCode

  1. Firstly, click to download pico-vscode package, unzip and open the package, double-click to install VSCode

    Note: If vscode is already installed, check if the version is v1.87.0 or higher

Install extension

  1. Click on EXTENSIONS, select Install from VSIX
  2. Select the package with vsix suffix, click Install
  3. Then vscode will automatically install Raspberry Pi Pico and its dependent extensions. You can click Refresh to view the installation progress
  4. The bottom right corner shows installation completed, close vscode

Configure extension

  1. Open the directory C:\Users\username and copy the entire .pico-sdk to that directory
  2. The copy is completed
  3. Open VSCode and configure various paths in the Raspberry Pi Pico extension

    The configuration is as follows:
    Cmake Path:
    ${HOME}/.pico-sdk/cmake/v3.28.6/bin/cmake.exe
    
    Git Path:
    ${HOME}/.pico-sdk/git/cmd/git.exe    
    
    Ninja Path:
    ${HOME}/.pico-sdk/ninja/v1.12.1/ninja.exe
    
    Python3 Path:
    ${HOME}/.pico-sdk/python/3.12.1/python.exe             
    

New project

  1. Configuration is completed, then create a new project. First enter the project name, select the path, and click Create to create the project
    To test the official example, you can click Example next to the project name to select
  2. The project was created successfully
  3. Select SDK version
  4. Select Yes for advanced configuration
  5. Select the cross-compilation chain, 13.2.Rel1 is for ARM cores, RISCV.13.3 is for RISCV cores, and you can choose one of them according to your needs
  6. Selects Default (the path configured earlier) for CMake version
  7. Select Default for Ninja version
  8. Select development board
  9. Click Complie to compile
  10. The uf2 format file is successfully compiled

Import project

  1. The Cmake file for importing the project cannot have Chinese (including comments), otherwise it may cause import failure
  2. To import your own project, you need to add a line of code to the Cmake file to switch between pico and pico2 normally, otherwise even if pico2 is selected, the compiled firmware will still be suitable for pico

    set(PICO_BOARD pico CACHE STRING "Board type")
    

Update extension

  1. The extension version in the offline package is 0.15.2, and you can also choose to update to the latest version after the installation is complete

Arduino IDE series

Install Arduino IDE

  1. First, go to Arduino official website to download the installation package of the Arduino IDE.
  2. Here, you just need to select to download.
  3. Once the download is complete, click Install.
    Notice: During the installation process, it will prompt you to install the driver, just click Install

Arduino IDE interface

  1. After the first installation, when you open the Arduino IDE, it will be in English. You can switch to other languages in File --> Preferences, or continue using the English interface.
  2. In the Language field, select the language you want to switch to, and click OK.

Install Arduino-Pico Core in the Arduino IDE

  1. Open the Arduino IDE, click on the file in the top left corner, and select Preferences
  2. Add the following link to the attached board manager URL, and then click OK
    https://github.com/earlephilhower/arduino-pico/releases/download/4.0.2/package_rp2040_index.json


    Note: If you already have an ESP32 board URL, you can use a comma to separate the URLs as follows:

    https://dl.espressif.com/dl/package_esp32_index.json,https://github.com/earlephilhower/arduino-pico/releases/download/4.0.2/package_rp2040_index.json
  3. Click Tools > Development Board > Board Manager > Search pico, as my computer has already been installed, it shows that it is installed

First upload of the program

  1. Press and hold the BOOTSET button on the Pico board, connect the pico to the USB port of the computer via the Micro USB cable, and release the button after the computer recognizes a removable hard disk (RPI-RP2).
  2. Download the program and open D1-LED.ino under the arduino\PWM\D1-LED path
  3. Click Tools --> Port, remember the existing COM, do not click this COM (the COM displayed is different on different computers, remember the COM on your own computer)
  4. Connect the power board to the computer using a USB cable. Then, go to Tools > Port. For the first connection, select uf2 Board. After uploading, when you connect again, an additional COM port will appear
  5. Click Tools > Development Board > Raspberry Pi Pico > Raspberry Pi Pico or Raspberry Pi Pico 2
  6. After setting it up, click the right arrow to upload the program

  • If issues arise during this period, and if you need to reinstall or update the Arduino IDE version, it is necessary to uninstall the Arduino IDE completely. After uninstalling the software, you need to manually delete all contents within the C:\Users\[name]\AppData\Local\Arduino15 folder (you need to show hidden files to see this folder). Then, proceed with a fresh installation.

Open source demos

MircoPython video demo (github)
MicroPython firmware/Blink demos (C)
Raspberry Pi official C/C++ demo (github)
Raspberry Pi official micropython demo (github)
Arduino official C/C++ demo (github)


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