BASIC Stamp

and has been popular with electronics hobbyists since the early 1990s due to its low threshold of learning and ease of use (due to its simple BASIC language). Although the BASIC Stamp has the form of a DIP chip, it is in fact a small Printed Circuit Board that contains the essential elements of a microprocessor system: The end result is that a hobbyist can connect a 9 V battery to a BASIC Stamp and have a complete system. While the BS1 and BS2 use a PIC, the remaining BASIC Stamp 2 variants use a Parallax SX processor. The third variant is the Javelin Stamp.

A connection to a personal computer allows the programmer to download software to the BASIC Stamp, which is stored in the onboard memory device. This module uses a subset of Sun Microsystems Java programming language instead of Parallax s PBASIC.

It does not include any networking facilities. The fourth variant is the Spin Stamp. It is made by Parallax, Inc.

The module is based on the Parallax Propeller and therefore uses the SPIN programming language instead of PBASIC. A number of companies now make clones of the BASIC Stamp with additional features, such as faster execution, Analog-to-digital converters and hardware-based PWM which can run in the background. However, while many use the same pinout as the BASIC Stamp in order to be hardware-compatible in larger-scale projects, they are not necessarily software-compatible. The Parallax Propeller is gradually accumulating software libraries which give it similar functionality to the BASIC Stamp, however there is no uniform list of which PBASIC facilities now have Spin equivalents. .

PBASIC incorporates common microcontroller functions, including PWM, serial communications, I²C and 1-Wire communications, communications with common LCD driver circuits, hobby servo pulse trains, pseudo-sine wave frequencies, and the ability to time an RC circuit which may be used to detect an analog value. Once the program has been written, it is tokenized and sent to the chip though a serial cable. There are currently four variants of the interpreter: The BS2 sub-variants feature more memory, faster execution speed, additional specialized PBASIC commands, extra I/O pins, etc, in comparison to the original BS2 model. This memory is nonvolatile: it remains programmed until it is erased or reprogrammed, even when the power is removed. The BASIC Stamp is programmed in a variant of the BASIC language, called PBASIC.

The BASIC Stamp is a microcontroller with a small, specialized BASIC interpreter (PBASIC) built into ROM.
 
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