acid-drop/lib/TFT_eSPI/examples/Test and diagnostics/Colour_Test/Colour_Test.ino

136 lines
3.4 KiB
C++

// Diagnostic test for the displayed colour order
//
// Written by Bodmer 17/2/19 for the TFT_eSPI library:
// https://github.com/Bodmer/TFT_eSPI
/*
Different hardware manufacturers use different colour order
configurations at the hardware level. This may result in
incorrect colours being displayed.
Incorrectly displayed colours could also be the result of
using the wrong display driver in the library setup file.
Typically displays have a control register (MADCTL) that can
be used to set the Red Green Blue (RGB) colour order to RGB
or BRG so that red and blue are swapped on the display.
This control register is also used to manage the display
rotation and coordinate mirroring. The control register
typically has 8 bits, for the ILI9341 these are:
Bit Function
7 Mirror Y coordinate (row address order)
6 Mirror X coordinate (column address order)
5 Row/column exchange (for rotation)
4 Refresh direction (top to bottom or bottom to top in portrait orientation)
3 RGB order (swaps red and blue)
2 Refresh direction (top to bottom or bottom to top in landscape orientation)
1 Not used
0 Not used
The control register bits can be written with this example command sequence:
tft.writecommand(TFT_MADCTL);
tft.writedata(0x48); // Bits 6 and 3 set
0x48 is the default value for ILI9341 (0xA8 for ESP32 M5STACK)
in rotation 0 orientation.
Another control register can be used to "invert" colours,
this swaps black and white as well as other colours (e.g.
green to magenta, red to cyan, blue to yellow).
To invert colours insert this line after tft.init() or tft.begin():
tft.invertDisplay( invert ); // Where invert is true or false
*/
#include <SPI.h>
#include <TFT_eSPI.h> // Hardware-specific library
TFT_eSPI tft = TFT_eSPI(); // Invoke custom library
void setup(void) {
tft.init();
tft.fillScreen(TFT_BLACK);
tft.drawRect(0, 0, tft.width(), tft.height(), TFT_GREEN);
// Set "cursor" at top left corner of display (0,0) and select font 4
tft.setCursor(0, 4, 4);
// Set the font colour to be white with a black background
tft.setTextColor(TFT_WHITE);
// We can now plot text on screen using the "print" class
tft.println(" Initialised default\n");
tft.println(" White text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_RED);
tft.println(" Red text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_GREEN);
tft.println(" Green text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_BLUE);
tft.println(" Blue text");
delay(5000);
}
void loop() {
tft.invertDisplay( false ); // Where i is true or false
tft.fillScreen(TFT_BLACK);
tft.drawRect(0, 0, tft.width(), tft.height(), TFT_GREEN);
tft.setCursor(0, 4, 4);
tft.setTextColor(TFT_WHITE);
tft.println(" Invert OFF\n");
tft.println(" White text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_RED);
tft.println(" Red text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_GREEN);
tft.println(" Green text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_BLUE);
tft.println(" Blue text");
delay(5000);
// Binary inversion of colours
tft.invertDisplay( true ); // Where i is true or false
tft.fillScreen(TFT_BLACK);
tft.drawRect(0, 0, tft.width(), tft.height(), TFT_GREEN);
tft.setCursor(0, 4, 4);
tft.setTextColor(TFT_WHITE);
tft.println(" Invert ON\n");
tft.println(" White text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_RED);
tft.println(" Red text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_GREEN);
tft.println(" Green text");
tft.setTextColor(TFT_BLUE);
tft.println(" Blue text");
delay(5000);
}