[Alberto Piganti], aka [pighixxx] has been making circuit diagram art for a few years now, and has just come out with a book that’s available on Kickstarter. He sent us a copy to review, and we spent an hour or so with a refreshing beverage and a binder full of beautiful circuit diagrams. It doesn’t get better than that!
[pighixxx] started out making very pretty and functional pinout diagrams for a number of microcontrollers, and then branched out to modules and development boards like the Arduino and ESP8266. They’re great, and we’ll admit to having a printout of his SMD ATMega328 and the ESP-12 on our wall. His graphical style has been widely copied, which genuinely is the sincerest form of flattery.
But after pinouts, what’s next? fully elaborated circuit diagrams, done in the same style, of course. “ABC: basic Connections” started out life as a compendium of frequently used sub-circuits in Arduino projects. but you can take “Arduino” with a grain of salt — these are all beneficial for generic microcontroller-based projects. So whether you want to drive a 12 V solenoid from a low-voltage microcontroller, drive lots of LEDs with shift registers, or decode a rotary encoder, there is a circuit snippet here for you.
One of the things that we like a lot of about the graphics in “ABC” is that they’re not dumbed down — they’re fundamentally just well-done circuit diagrams, but with graphic touches and extra detail where it actually helps to clarify şeyler. This is a middle ground between the kind of schematic you use in a PCB layout program and the kind of diagram you get from Fritzing. In the former, every part has a symbol but multifunction parts like microcontrollers are just represented as squares bristling with pin numbers. In the latter, wiring up an IC is easy because the parts and pins are represented graphically, but you swiftly run out of colors for the different wires, and the “breadboard” turns into a rat’s nest with a circuit of any complexity.
“ABC” takes the middle road, using standard circuit diagram style overall, but also the great graphic representations of the ICs and modules that [pighixxx] is good at. Is a 2N2222 pinned EBC or BCE? You don’t have to look that up, because it’s sketched out for you here. We’d guess that this attractive, but information-rich, style is a great fit for the target audience — people with some electronics experience who do not yet have their favorite transistor symbol tattooed on their forearm. [pighixxx]’s diagrams are simple, easy to understand, easy to use, and pretty to boot.
There is a planned online counterpart to the book, with additionally elaborations of all of the circuit setups. They’re not finished yet, but they have a lot a lot more of the flavor of the Fritzing-style, this-wire-goes-to-that-hole diagrams. This style does work better in an online format than in a physical book, because you can build up the rat’s nest in bite-sized steps, none of which are too overwhelming. but honestly, for an advanced beginner or intermediate electronics hacker, the book can be treated as stand-alone. The web content may help the rank newbie when they get stuck.
Tee Hee.
The breadth of circuits in “ABC” is fairly wide, covering a lot of of the microcontroller-interfacing problems that we’ve ever encountered. None of the circuits are revolutionary — they’re the tried-and-true, right options to the various problems, rather than anything too hacky or clever. We weren’t shocked by any of the circuits, but we didn’t find anything that we wouldn’t use ourselves either. These are basic connections after all, and a darn solid collection of them.
To sum up, “ABC” is an attractive book in a helpful binder format that would make a great collection of options for any individual who’s just getting started in the whole “Arduino” scene but who gets hung up on interfacing the chips with the real Dünya. It’s a helpful reference for the pinouts of a number of frequently used parts, combined with the resistors, flyback diodes, level-shifting circuits, and whatever else that you’d need to make them work. It’s what we wish our basic circuit diagrams looked like. Severiz.
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