Adafruit GFX Graphics Library
Adafruit GFX Graphics Library
https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-gfx-graphics-library
Overview 3
• The Old Way
• Accessing GFX Functions
Graphics Primitives 7
• Drawing pixels (points)
• Drawing lines
• Rectangles
• Circles
• Rounded rectangles
• Triangles
• Characters and text
• Extended Characters, CP437 and a Lurking Bug
• Bitmaps
• Clearing or filling the screen
• Hardware-Specific functions
Using Fonts 19
• Using GFX Fonts in Arduino Sketches
• Adding New Fonts
Loading Images 24
• Using the Adafruit_ImageReader Library
• Loading and Using Images in RAM
The Adafruit_GFX library for Arduino provides a common syntax and set of graphics
functions for all of our LCD and OLED displays and LED matrices. This allows Arduino
sketches to easily be adapted between display types with minimal fuss…and any new
features, performance improvements and bug fixes will immediately apply across our
complete offering of color displays.
Adafruit_GFX always works together with an additional library unique to each specific
display type. These can be installed using the Arduino Library Manager. From the
Arduino “Sketch” menu, select “Include Library,” then “Manage Libraries…”
In the Arduino Library Manager window, search for a display’s driver type (e.g.
“SSD1325”) and the appropriate Adafruit library can be found in the results. Required
companion libraries (“dependencies,” like Adafruit_GFX or Adafruit_BusIO) now get
installed automatically. If using an older version of the Arduino IDE, you’ll have to
search for and install those additional libraries manually.
And many others, except for some very early “retired” products. Remember, just
search for the display driver type in the Arduino Library manager, install, and the rest
is automatic now.
The libraries are written in C++ for Arduino but could easily be ported to any
microcontroller by rewriting the low-level pin access functions.
Also unlike the mathematical Cartesian coordinate system, points here have
dimension — they are always one full integer pixel wide and tall.
The library will safely “clip” any graphics drawn off the edges of the screen. In fact
this is done on purpose sometimes, as with scrolling text displays.
For color-capable displays, colors are represented as unsigned 16-bit values. Some
displays may physically be capable of more or fewer bits than this, but the library
operates with 16-bit values…these are easy for the Arduino to work with while also
providing a consistent data type across all the different displays. The primary color
components — red, green and blue — are all “packed” into a single 16-bit variable,
with the most significant 5 bits conveying red, middle 6 bits conveying green, and
least significant 5 bits conveying blue. That extra bit is assigned to green because our
eyes are most sensitive to green light. Science!
// Color definitions
#define BLACK 0x0000
#define BLUE 0x001F
#define RED 0xF800
#define GREEN 0x07E0
#define CYAN 0x07FF
#define MAGENTA 0xF81F
#define YELLOW 0xFFE0
#define WHITE 0xFFFF
For monochrome (single-color) displays, colors are always specified as simply 1 (set)
or 0 (clear). The semantics of set/clear are specific to the type of display: with
something like a luminous OLED display, a “set” pixel is lighted, whereas with a
reflective LCD display, a “set” pixel is typically dark. There may be exceptions, but
generally you can count on 0 (clear) representing the default background state for a
freshly-initialized display, whatever that works out to be.
Graphics Primitives
Each device-specific display library will have its own constructors and initialization
functions. These are documented in the individual tutorials for each display type, or
oftentimes are evident in the specific library header file. The remainder of this tutorial
covers the common graphics functions that work the same regardless of the display
type.
The function descriptions below are merely prototypes — there’s an assumption that a
display object is declared and initialized as needed by the device-specific library.
Look at the example code with each library to see it in actual use. For example, where
we show print(1234.56), your actual code would place the object name before this,
e.g. it might read screen.print(1234.56) (if you have declared your display object with
the name screen).
First up is the most basic pixel pusher. You can call this with X, Y coordinates and a
color and it will make a single dot:
Drawing lines
You can also draw lines, with a starting and end point and color:
void drawLine(uint16_t x0, uint16_t y0, uint16_t x1, uint16_t y1, uint16_t color);
Rectangles
Next up, rectangles and squares can be drawn and filled using the following
procedures. Each accepts an X, Y pair for the top-left corner of the rectangle, a width
and height (in pixels), and a color. drawRect() renders just the frame (outline) of the
rectangle — the interior is unaffected — while fillRect() fills the entire area with a given
color:
Circles
Likewise, for circles, you can draw and fill. Each function accepts an X, Y pair for the
center point, a radius in pixels, and a color:
Triangles
With triangles, once again there are the draw and fill functions. Each requires a full
seven parameters: the X, Y coordinates for three corner points defining the triangle,
followed by a color:
void drawTriangle(uint16_t x0, uint16_t y0, uint16_t x1, uint16_t y1, uint16_t x2,
uint16_t y2, uint16_t color);
void fillTriangle(uint16_t x0, uint16_t y0, uint16_t x1, uint16_t y1, uint16_t x2,
uint16_t y2, uint16_t color);
Text is very flexible but operates a bit differently. Instead of one procedure, the text
size, color and position are set up in separate functions and then the print() function is
used — this makes it easy and provides all of the same string and number formatting
Begin with setCursor(x, y), which will place the top left corner of the text wherever you
please. Initially this is set to (0,0) (the top-left corner of the screen). Then set the text
color with setTextColor(color) — by default this is white. Text is normally drawn “clear”
— the open parts of each character show the original background contents, but if you
want the text to block out what’s underneath, a background color can be specified as
an optional second parameter to setTextColor(). Finally, setTextSize(size) will multiply
the scale of the text by a given integer factor. Below you can see scales of 1 (the
default), 2 and 3. It appears blocky at larger sizes because we only ship the library
with a single simple font, to save space.
Text background color is not supported for custom fonts (explained on “Using
Fonts” page). For these, you will need to determine the text extents and explicitly
draw a filled rectangle before drawing the text. This is on purpose and by design.
After setting everything up, you can use print() or println() — just like you do with Seria
l printing ()! For example, to print a string, use print("Hello world") - that’s the first line
of the image above. You can also use print() for numbers and variables — the second
line above is the output of print(1234.56) and the third line is print(0xDEADBEEF,
HEX).
The built-in font is based on the original IBM PC character set, known as Code Page
437 (CP437 for short) (). Many embedded systems still use this as it’s compact and
well established.
Years ago, when originally transcribing CP437 into the GFX library, one symbol was
accidentally omitted. Nothing fatal, code runs fine, but every subsequent symbol was
then off by one compared to the “real” CP437 character set. By the time this was
discovered, so much code had been written — projects shared online but also in fixed
media like books and magazines — that fixing the bug would break every existing
project that relied on those extended characters!
So the error has been left in place, on purpose, but this creates a different issue if
one is adapting code from elsewhere that relies on the correct CP437 symbol values.
display.cp437(true);
Unless you need to switch back and forth, this typically only needs to be done one
time, in the setup() function.
Here’s a map of the built-in character set, both the standard erroneous version, and
the corrected version used when one calls cp437(true) . Notice this only affects the
last five rows of symbols; everything prior to character 0xB0 is unaffected:
Extended characters typically can’t be directly printed in code; most editors may
support Unicode strings but this does not directly map to CP437. Typically one calls
the write() function with individual character numbers. The GFX library harkens
back to an earlier time when Unicode support was not widespread.
Consider the German word Schön (beautiful). One might print this like so:
Compiler support for some (not all) 32-bit microcontrollers provides the printf()
function, which can allow these characters to be placed inline via the %c (character)
formatting identifier:
display.cp437(true);
display.printf("Temperature: %d%c\n", number, 0xF8);
display.printf("Sch%cn\n", 0x94);
See the “Using Fonts ()” page for additional text features in the latest GFX library.
Bitmaps
You can draw small monochrome (single color) bitmaps, good for sprites and other
mini-animations or icons:
This issues a contiguous block of bits to the display, where each '1' bit sets the
corresponding pixel to 'color,' while each '0' bit is skipped. x, y is the top-left corner
where the bitmap is drawn, w, h are the width and height in pixels.
The bitmap data must be located in program memory using the PROGMEM directive.
This is a somewhat advanced function and beginners are best advised to come back
to this later. For an introduction, see the Arduino tutorial on PROGMEM usage ().
The fillScreen() function will set the entire display to a given color, erasing any existing
content:
Hardware-Specific functions
Some displays may have unique features like screen invert or hardware-based
scrolling. Documentation for those functions can be found in the corresponding
display-specific guide. Since these are not common features across all GFX-
compatible displays, they are not described here.
We can only rotate 0, 90, 180 or 270 degrees - anything else is not possible in
hardware and is too taxing for an Arduino to calculate in software
The rotation parameter can be 0, 1, 2 or 3. For displays that are part of an Arduino
shield, rotation value 0 sets the display to a portrait (tall) mode, with the USB jack at
the top right. Rotation value 2 is also a portrait mode, with the USB jack at the bottom
left. Rotation 1 is landscape (wide) mode, with the USB jack at the bottom right, while
rotation 3 is also landscape, but with the USB jack at the top left.
For other displays, please try all 4 rotations to figure out how they end up rotating as
the alignment will vary depending on each display, in general the rotations move
counter-clockwise
When rotating, the origin point (0,0) changes — the idea is that it should be arranged
at the top-left of the display for the other graphics functions to make consistent sense
(and match all the function descriptions above).
uint16_t width();
uint16_t height();
Each returns the dimension (in pixels) of the corresponding axis, adjusted for the
display’s current rotation setting.
Using Fonts
More recent versions of the Adafruit GFX library offer the ability to use alternate fonts
besides the one standard fixed-size and -spaced face that’s built in. Several alternate
fonts are included, plus there’s the ability to add new ones.
Located inside the “Fonts” folder inside Adafruit_GFX, the included files (as of this
writing) are:
FreeMono12pt7b.h FreeSansBoldOblique12pt7b.h
FreeMono18pt7b.h FreeSansBoldOblique18pt7b.h
FreeMono24pt7b.h FreeSansBoldOblique24pt7b.h
FreeMono9pt7b.h FreeSansBoldOblique9pt7b.h
FreeMonoBold12pt7b.h FreeSansOblique12pt7b.h
FreeMonoBold18pt7b.h FreeSansOblique18pt7b.h
FreeMonoBold24pt7b.h FreeSansOblique24pt7b.h
FreeMonoBold9pt7b.h FreeSansOblique9pt7b.h
FreeMonoBoldOblique12pt7b.h FreeSerif12pt7b.h
FreeMonoBoldOblique18pt7b.h FreeSerif18pt7b.h
FreeMonoBoldOblique24pt7b.h FreeSerif24pt7b.h
FreeMonoBoldOblique9pt7b.h FreeSerif9pt7b.h
FreeMonoOblique12pt7b.h FreeSerifBold12pt7b.h
FreeMonoOblique18pt7b.h FreeSerifBold18pt7b.h
FreeMonoOblique24pt7b.h FreeSerifBold24pt7b.h
FreeMonoOblique9pt7b.h FreeSerifBold9pt7b.h
FreeSans12pt7b.h FreeSerifBoldItalic12pt7b.h
Each filename starts with the face name (“FreeMono”, “FreeSerif”, etc.) followed by
the style (“Bold”, “Oblique”, none, etc.), font size in points (currently 9, 12, 18 and 24
point sizes are provided) and “7b” to indicate that these contain 7-bit characters
(ASCII codes “ ” through “~”); 8-bit fonts (supporting symbols and/or international
characters) are not yet provided but may come later.
Each font takes up a bit of program space; larger fonts typically require more room.
This is a finite resource (about 32K max on an Arduino Uno for font data and all of
your sketch code), so choose carefully. Too big and the code will refuse to compile (or
in some edge cases, may compile but then won’t upload to the board). If this
happens, use fewer or smaller fonts, or use the standard built-in font.
Inside these .h files are several data structures, including one main font structure
which will usually have the same name as the font file (minus the .h). To select a font
for subsequent graphics operations, use the setFont() function, passing the address
of this structure, such as:
tft.setFont(&FreeMonoBoldOblique12pt7b);
Subsequent calls to tft.print() will now use this font. Most other attributes that
previously worked with the built-in font (color, size, etc.) work similarly here.
To return to the standard fixed-size font, call setFont(), passing either NULL or no
arguments:
tft.setFont();
Some text attributes behave a little differently with these new fonts. Not wanting to
break compatibility with existing code, the “classic” font continues to behave as
before.
For example, whereas the cursor position when printing with the classic font identified
the top-left corner of the character cell, with new fonts the cursor position indicates
the baseline — the bottom-most row — of subsequent text. Characters may vary in
size and width, and don’t necessarily begin at the exact cursor column (as in below,
this character starts one pixel left of the cursor, but others may be on or to the right of
it).
When switching between built-in and custom fonts, the library will automatically shift
the cursor position up or down 6 pixels as needed to continue along the same
baseline.
One “gotcha” to be aware of with new fonts: there is no “background” color option…
you can set this value but it will be ignored.
The background color feature is sometimes used with the “classic” font to overwrite
old screen contents with new data. This only works because those characters are a
uniform size; that won’t work with proportionally-spaced fonts, where the bounds of a
getTextBounds expects a string, a starting cursor X&Y position (the current cursor
position will not be altered), and addresses of two signed and two unsigned 16-bit
integers. These last four values will then contain the upper-left corner and the width &
height of the area covered by this text — these can then be passed directly as
arguments to fillRect().
This will unfortunately “blink” the text when erasing and redrawing, but is
unavoidable. The old scheme of drawing background pixels in the same pass only
creates a new set of problems.
or:
• Create a GFXcanvas1 object (an offscreen bitmap) for a fixed-size area, draw
custom text in there and copy to the screen using drawBitmap().
// In global declarations:
GFXcanvas1 canvas(128, 32); // 128x32 pixel canvas
// In code later:
canvas.println("I like cake");
tft.drawBitmap(x, y, canvas.getBuffer(), 128, 32, foreground, background); // Copy
to screen
This will be flicker-free but requires more RAM (about 512 bytes for the 128x32 pixel
canvas shown above), so it’s not always practical on AVR boards with only 2K.
Arduino Mega or any 32-bit board should manage fine.
Building this tool requires the gcc compiler and FreeType () library. Most Linux
distributions include both by default. For others, you may need to install developer
tools and download and build FreeType from the source (). Then edit the Makefile to
match your setup before invoking “make”.
The GNU FreeFont files are not included in the library repository but are
easily downloaded (). Or you can convert most any font you like.
The name assigned to the font structure within this file is based on the input filename
and font size, not the output. This is why I recommend using descriptive filenames
incorporating the font base name, size, and "7b". Then the .h filename and font
structure name can match.
The resulting .h file can be copied to the Adafruit_GFX/Fonts folder, or you can import
the file as a new tab in your Arduino sketch using the Sketch→Add File… command.
If in the Fonts folder, use this syntax when #including the file:
#include <Fonts/myfont12pt7b.h>
#include "myfont12pt7b.h"
Loading .BMP images from an SD card (or the flash memory chip on Adafruit
“Express” boards) is an option for most of our color displays…though it’s not built into
Adafruit_GFX and must be separately installed.
The Adafruit_ImageReader library handles this task. It can be installed through the
Arduino Library Manager (Sketch→Include Library→Manage Libraries…). Enter
“imageread” in the search field and the library is easy to spot:
While you’re there, also look for the Adafruit_SPIFlash library and install it similarly.
There’s one more library required, but it can’t be installed through the Library
Manager. The Adafruit fork of the SdFat library needs to be downloaded as a .ZIP file,
uncompressed and installed the old-school Arduino library way ().
One of these lines may vary from one example to the next, depending which display
hardware it’s written to support. Above we see it being used with the Adafruit_ILI9341
display library required of certain shields, FeatherWings or breakout boards. Others
examples reference Adafruit_HX8357, Adafruit_ST7735, or other color TFT or OLED
display libraries…use the right one for the hardware you have.
Most of the examples can work from either an SD card, or the small flash storage
drive that’s on certain Adafruit “Express” boards. The code to initialize one or the
other is a little different, and the examples check whether USE_SD_CARD is #defined
to select one method vs. the other. If you know for a fact that your own project only
needs to run on one type or the other, you really only need the corresponding
initialization.
The “reader” object will be used to access the image-loading functions later.
Then…we declare a display object (called “tft” in most of the examples) the usual
way…for example, with the 2.8 inch TFT touch shield for Arduino, it’s:
That all takes place in the global variable section, even before the setup() function.
Now we need to do some work in setup(), and again it’s different for SD cards vs. flash
filesystems…
This example is providing some very basic error handling…checking the return status
of SD.begin() and printing a message to the Serial Monitor if there’s a problem.
if(!flash.begin()) {
Serial.println(F("flash begin() failed"));
for(;;);
}
if(!filesys.begin(&flash)) {
Serial.println(F("filesys begin() failed"));
All other code is now the same regardless whether using an SD card or flash. That
either/or setup required some extra steps but it’s all smooth sailing now…
After the SD (or flash) and TFT’s begin() functions have been called, you can then
call reader.drawBMP() to load a BMP image from the card to the screen:
ImageReturnCode stat;
stat = reader.drawBMP("/purple.bmp", tft, 0, 0);
• A filename in “8.3” format (you shouldn’t need to provide an absolute path (the
leading “/”), but there are some issues with the SD library on some cutting-edge
boards like the ESP32, so go ahead and include this for good measure).
• The display object where the image will be drawn (e.g. “tft”). This is the weird
syntax previously mentioned…rather than tft.drawBMP(), it’s reader.drawBMP(tft),
because reasons.
• An X and Y coordinate where the top-left corner of the image is positioned (this
doesn’t need to be within screen bounds…the library will clip the image as it’s
loaded). 0, 0 will draw the image at the top-left corner…so if the image
dimensions match the screen dimensions, it will fill the entire screen.
This function returns a value of type ImageReturnCode , which you can either ignore
or use it to provide some diagnostic functionality. Possible values are:
• IMAGE_SUCCESS — Image loaded successfully (or was clipped fully off screen,
still considered “successful” in that there was no error).
• IMAGE_ERR_FILE_NOT_FOUND — Could not open the requested file (check
spelling, confirm file actually exists on the card, make sure it conforms to “8.3”
file naming convention (e.g. “filename.bmp”).
• IMAGE_ERR_FORMAT — Not a supported image format. Currently only uncompre
ssed 24-bit color BMPs are supported (more will likely be added over time).
• IMAGE_ERR_MALLOC — Could not allocate memory for operation (drawBMP()
won’t generate this error, but other ImageReader functions might).
Rather than dealing with these values yourself, you can optionally call a function to
display a basic diagnostic message to the Serial console:
reader.printStatus(stat);
This introduces another ImageReader function plus a new object type, Adafruit_Ima
ge :
Adafruit_Image img;
stat = reader.loadBMP("/wales.bmp", img);
After loading, use the img.draw() function to display an image on the screen:
img.draw(tft, x, y);
• A display object (e.g. “tft” in most of the examples), similar to how drawBMP()
worked.
• An X and Y coordinate for the upper-left corner of the image on the screen,
again similar to drawBMP() .
If the image failed to load for any reason, img.draw() can still be called, it just won’t
do anything. But at least the sketch won’t crash.
There are a couple of approaches one can use to minimize this effect. The first (and
usually easiest) is suited to the standard fixed-size GFX font and is best for Arduino
Uno and other memory-constrained microcontrollers. The other applies to custom
fonts and any other graphics primitives, and is best for modern 32-bit microcontrollers
with ample RAM (thought may still work on Uno for very small updates).
display.setTextColor(foreground, background);
Here’s how that might be used in an Arduino sketch. Understand that this is not a
complete program because every type of display has a distinct setup procedure. Com
plete examples for PyPortal are given at the bottom of this page, providing a starting
point that can be adapted to other screen types. Look at the “graphicstest” example
that accompanies most GFX-compatible libraries for insights.
void setup() {
// Likewise, display initialization would take place here.
void loop() {
display.setCursor(0, 0); // Position at top-left corner
The sketch alternately prints “Hello” and “World” at the top-left corner of the screen;
each pass erases the text that came before, there’s no need to explicitly erase that
area. (Try removing the second argument to setTextColor() and watch what
happens.)
This works because both messages are the same 5-character length (30x7 pixels at
the default text size, 60x14 at size 2 and so forth). If the messages are different
lengths, it’s necessary to pad a string with extra spaces to overwrite the old text
underneath.
One way to do this is by declaring a fixed-size character buffer and then using C’s for
matted output via the sprintf() function. Let’s suppose a project will need up to 10
characters for each message. We begin by declaring a char array with 11
elements, because C strings require a trailing NUL (0) byte at the end:
And the buffer can then be passed to the normal print() or println() functions:
display.setCursor(x, y);
display.print(buf);
sprintf() has near infinite variety so we can’t give every possible example here.
Since it’s a standard part of the C language, just searching around for “C formatted
output” or just “sprintf” will turn up plenty of references. It’s quite potent! Note
however that the Arduino implementation is somewhat scaled back to fit on a
microcontroller; formatting floating-point values this way is not supported, for
example.
One approach to overwriting floating-point values is to use the normal Arduino print
() function to the display, which accepts an optional argument specifying the number
of digits after the decimal point, so the output is always the same size:
Another approach, if numbers or messages to print may vary in length, is just to follow
up with enough spaces to cover up any change in the number of characters. But this
relies on there not being any other stuff toward the right edge of the screen and isn’t
suited to every situation:
display.setTextColor(foreground);
Where it doesn’t work is with custom fonts, or with non-text elements like graphics or
indicators. In fact, the optional second argument to setTextColor() (the
background color) is simply ignored when using custom fonts. This is on purpose and
by design! With proportionally-spaced fonts, strings will occupy different-sized
regions, even if they contain the same number of characters…the overwrite technique
simply can’t be relied on.
The GFX library can provide an offscreen canvas. It works just like drawing to a
screen…except there’s no screen, just a grid of pixels in memory. The canvas can then
be passed to another function (explained later), which does draw it to the screen.
A canvas doesn’t need to match the size of the screen; if you’re just updating a
rectangle, it only needs to be that size. That’s important because every pixel takes a
little RAM. Also a program can have more than one canvas if needed.
There are different canvas depths for 1, 8 and 16-bit color. We’ll focus on just 1 and 16
here; the 8-bit case is seldom seen.
The 1-bit canvas type— GFXcanvas1 —provides two colors; foreground and
background, or foreground and transparent, much like working with the built-in font
and setTextColor() . For most single-color things like text, this is what you’d use.
A canvas might be declared in the global part of one’s sketch, before the setup()
function, like so:
width and height should be the canvas dimensions, in pixels. Each pixel requires 1 bit
of RAM…so for instance, 120x30 pixels = 3,600 bits = 450 bytes…plus a couple dozen
bytes overhead for the GFXcanvas1 structure itself. A single small canvas like that
can usually work in the modest 1.5K of an Arduino Uno, but complex programs, larger
or multiple canvases, or color (explained later) require more capable devices.
Canvases use all the same drawing functions as normally provided by the GFX library.
So, where one might use display.fillScreen(0) before, one can use
canvas.fillScreen(0) instead (though the canvas is not a screen, it’s helpful to
keep the names uniform across everything). This applies to all the pixel, shape and
So the idea here is to just wipe and redraw the entire contents of the canvas each
time a redraw is needed. Although GFX provides the getTextBounds() function, it
just isn’t necessary to go to such fuss to be “optimal”—canvases are already super
quick to work with.
As before, this example is incomplete and just highlights the important ideas here. A
full working example for PyPortal (and adaptable to other screens) is given at the
bottom of the page.
void setup() {
// Display init and font select would take place here.
// See later examples for that.
void loop() {
canvas.fillScreen(0); // Clear canvas (not display)
canvas.setCursor(0, 24); // Pos. is BASE LINE when using fonts!
canvas.print(millis()); // Print elapsed time in milliseconds
// Copy canvas to screen at upper-left corner. As written here,
// assumes a color LCD, hence the color values of 0xFFFF (white)
// for foreground, 0x0000 (black) for background. Mono OLED can
// use 1 and 0. BOTH colors must be specified to overwrite the
// prior screen contents there.
display.drawBitmap(0, 0, canvas.getBuffer(),
canvas.width(), canvas.height(), 0xFFFF, 0x0000);
}
Notice how the fill, cursor and print operations are all performed on the canvas
object, but the bitmap-drawing operation is done on the display object. It’s easy to
confuse these; if something like a custom font doesn’t seem to be working, confirm
you’ve set that for the canvas, not the display!
Because GFX “clips” graphics drawn to the canvas, this can be used for interesting
effects like scrolling text within a rectangle in one section of a screen.
If you have multiple numbers or areas of the screen to update, and these are all the
same dimensions, a single canvas can be re-used among them; it’s not always
necessary to allocate multiple distinct canvases, unless the size varies.
A Color Canvas
The 16-bit canvas type— GFXcanvas16 —works much like a 16-bit LCD screen. Instead
of foreground and background (or transparent) colors, one has the whole 64K gamut
of colors to work with. If you’re only planning to draw text, you probably don’t need
this, a GFXcanvas1 will suffice, and you can specify any single color when copying to
the display.
Like the 1-bit variety, this can be declared in the global part of one’s sketch, before
the setup() function:
Unlike the 1-bit variety, GFXcanvas16 uses inordinate RAM; 2 bytes per pixel. That
120x30 pixel example from earlier now requires 7,200 bytes…way beyond the reach of
the Arduino Uno’s 1.5K RAM, but practical for more modern microcontrollers to
handle.
There are some differences when copying a color canvas to the screen. First, one
now uses the drawRGBBitmap() function, which accepts mostly the same arguments
but omits the foreground and background colors (since the canvas itself is now full
color):
Examples
Here’s the simple “text overwrite” example as written for PyPortal. This could be
adapted to other screens by changing the display declaration and initialization; see
the “graphicstest” example that accompanies most display libraries.
void setup() {
pinMode(TFT_BACKLIGHT, OUTPUT); // PyPortal requires
digitalWrite(TFT_BACKLIGHT, HIGH); // turning on backlight
void loop(void) {
display.setCursor(0, 0); // Position at top-left corner
display.print("Hello"); // Print a message
delay(1000); // Pause 1 second
display.setCursor(0, 0); // Back to top-left corner
display.print("World"); // Print another message, same length
delay(1000); // Pause 1 second
}
And here’s a “1-bit canvas” example as written for PyPortal, using a large and friendly
font. Again, this could be adapted to other screens by changing the display
declaration and initialization; see the “graphicstest” example that accompanies most
display libraries.
#include <Adafruit_GFX.h>
#include <Adafruit_ILI9341.h>
#include <Fonts/FreeSerifBold18pt7b.h>
void setup() {
pinMode(TFT_BACKLIGHT, OUTPUT); // PyPortal requires
digitalWrite(TFT_BACKLIGHT, HIGH); // turning on backlight
void loop(void) {
canvas.fillScreen(0); // Clear canvas (not display)
canvas.setCursor(0, 24); // Pos. is BASE LINE when using fonts!
canvas.print(millis()); // Print elapsed time in milliseconds
// Copy canvas to screen at upper-left corner. As written here,
// assumes a color LCD, hence the color values of 0xFFFF (white)
// for foreground, 0x0000 (black) for background. Mono OLED can
// use 1 and 0. BOTH colors must be specified to overwrite the
// prior screen contents there.
display.drawBitmap(0, 0, canvas.getBuffer(),
canvas.width(), canvas.height(), 0xFFFF, 0x0000);
}
Once more, using a 16-bit canvas instead. This example doesn’t make good use of
color in the canvas—it’s still just white text on a black background—and is mostly just
to show how the drawing syntax is a little different.
#include <Adafruit_GFX.h>
#include <Adafruit_ILI9341.h>
#include <Fonts/FreeSerifBold18pt7b.h>
void setup() {
pinMode(TFT_BACKLIGHT, OUTPUT); // PyPortal requires
digitalWrite(TFT_BACKLIGHT, HIGH); // turning on backlight
void loop(void) {
canvas.fillScreen(0x0000); // Clear canvas (not display)
canvas.setCursor(0, 24); // Pos. is BASE LINE when using fonts!
canvas.print(millis()); // Print elapsed time in milliseconds
// Copy canvas to screen at upper-left corner.
display.drawRGBBitmap(0, 0, canvas.getBuffer(), canvas.width(), canvas.height());
}