Three protocols for the nRF24L01+ radio module. All are based on a link between two radios, where one acts as master (initiating communications) and the other acts as slave (responding to transmissions). The async-radio-pickle hides this underlying master/slave asymmetry.
A protocol for short fixed-length records which trades the simplicity of use of
radio-pickle in exchange for higher speeds and (slightly) greater range.
See README
This offers a simple way to use the nRF24L01+ radio to exchange arbitrary
Python objects between two Pyboards. This is the easy way to do it!
See README
A version of radio-pickle which uses uasyncio to achieve non-blocking behaviour. The unit of communication is an arbitrary Python object. It provides a symmetrical Channel object enabling either end of the link to send unsolicited messages. This enables the same code to run on both ends of the link with the exception of a single boolean initialisation flag which must differ at each end.
One aim of this was to achieve "reliable" communication in the sense that messages would never be lost. If a unit moved out of range the message would inevitably be delayed until it moved back into range - but it would eventually get through. Alas this has not yet been achieved: under circumstances of poor communication messages are occasionally lost.
See README
The End - Comment for Udemy course