Right, after reading several threads about scrolling displays I can achieve scrolling of individual lines by using the indexing counter method or the both lines in unison using the scroll command code.
However yo me it looks like using the indexing counter method appears to increase in speed as it moves across the display and from that point of view looks a little...well silly.
I was wondering if there is a way to make the control command scrolling apply to just one line of the display rather than both as that's consistent.
Also like others I'd like to have the 'big print version' or 'dummies guide' equivalent of the the control commands for the serial LCD/OLED. I know it says for a full list refer to www.picaxe.com/docs/led008.pdf however looking at that means little to me and I'd just like it in a simple to understand numeric list such as below
serout pin, baud (254, XXX) where XXX is a numeric
24 = scroll left 1 digit
28 = scroll right 1 digit
128 = move to first digit of line one
etc etc ...
I'm using the standard Serial OLED module AXE133 and a 18m2 to drive that. On a breadboard whilst I'm testing things out on it prior to using it on a project.
Regards, Rex
However yo me it looks like using the indexing counter method appears to increase in speed as it moves across the display and from that point of view looks a little...well silly.
I was wondering if there is a way to make the control command scrolling apply to just one line of the display rather than both as that's consistent.
Also like others I'd like to have the 'big print version' or 'dummies guide' equivalent of the the control commands for the serial LCD/OLED. I know it says for a full list refer to www.picaxe.com/docs/led008.pdf however looking at that means little to me and I'd just like it in a simple to understand numeric list such as below
serout pin, baud (254, XXX) where XXX is a numeric
24 = scroll left 1 digit
28 = scroll right 1 digit
128 = move to first digit of line one
etc etc ...
I'm using the standard Serial OLED module AXE133 and a 18m2 to drive that. On a breadboard whilst I'm testing things out on it prior to using it on a project.
Regards, Rex