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authorreinelt <>2000-04-19 04:44:20 +0000
committerreinelt <>2000-04-19 04:44:20 +0000
commit4a901dfe5a207e62cac27b9c2e01cc00a6428455 (patch)
treeee823655284c495db83c9339866b82ebed8e27a9
parentc2006e7cd933e3df3e3af37c45298b2dc336b33f (diff)
downloadlcd4linux-4a901dfe5a207e62cac27b9c2e01cc00a6428455.tar.gz
[lcd4linux @ 2000-04-19 04:44:20 by reinelt]
README for HD44780 driver
-rw-r--r--README.HD447804
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/README.HD44780 b/README.HD44780
index 8fc87d4..0389221 100644
--- a/README.HD44780
+++ b/README.HD44780
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
#
-# $Id: README.HD44780,v 1.1 2000/04/17 05:14:27 reinelt Exp $
+# $Id: README.HD44780,v 1.2 2000/04/19 04:44:20 reinelt Exp $
#
This is the README file for the HD44780 display driver for lcd4linux
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ These displays are made by different manufactures, and come in various sizes.
The following types are known to work:
DataVision DV16244: 2 lines by 16 characters
- PM0820A: 2 lines by 8 characters
+Nan Ya NLC 08x2x06: 2 lines by 8 characters
The displays are connected to the parallel board (see Wiring below), and are quite timing-critical.
There's no way to delay a usermode program under Linux for e.g. 40 usec, so we have to do