16

I have Python 3.6.1 and PySerial Installed. I am trying the

I am able to get the list of comports connected. I now want to be able to send data to the COM port and receive responses back. How can I do that? I am not sure of the command to try next.

Code:

import serial.tools.list_ports as port_list
ports = list(port_list.comports())
for p in ports:
    print (p)

Output:

COM7 - Prolific USB-to-Serial Comm Port (COM7)

COM1 - Communications Port (COM1)

I see from the PySerial Documentation that the way to open a COM Port is as below:

import serial

>>> ser = serial.Serial('/dev/ttyUSB0')  # open serial port

>>> print(ser.name)         # check which port was really used

>>> ser.write(b'hello')     # write a string

>>> ser.close()             # close port

I am running on Windows and I get an error for the following line:

ser = serial.Serial('/dev/ttyUSB0')

This is because '/dev/ttyUSB0' makes no sense in Windows. What can I do in Windows?

4
  • Yes, silly me. Should have researched a bit. I can mark yours as an answer if you answer.
    – Neil Dey
    May 18, 2017 at 20:08
  • 1
    It's ok to ask for help like that when you've at least tried it as you did :) May 18, 2017 at 20:11
  • Can you please keep that link shared to that you had earlier?
    – Neil Dey
    May 18, 2017 at 21:11
  • Its in my answer May 18, 2017 at 21:15

2 Answers 2

16

This could be what you want. I'll have a look at the docs on writing. In windows use COM1 and COM2 etc without /dev/tty/ as that is for unix based systems. To read just use s.read() which waits for data, to write use s.write().

import serial

s = serial.Serial('COM7')
res = s.read()
print(res)

you may need to decode in to get integer values if thats whats being sent.

12

On Windows, you need to install pyserial by running

pip install pyserial

then your code would be

import serial
import time

serialPort = serial.Serial(
    port="COM4", baudrate=9600, bytesize=8, timeout=2, stopbits=serial.STOPBITS_ONE
)
serialString = ""  # Used to hold data coming over UART
while 1:
    # Wait until there is data waiting in the serial buffer
    if serialPort.in_waiting > 0:

        # Read data out of the buffer until a carraige return / new line is found
        serialString = serialPort.readline()

        # Print the contents of the serial data
        try:
            print(serialString.decode("Ascii"))
        except:
            pass

to write data to the port use the following method

serialPort.write(b"Hi How are you \r\n")

note:b"" indicate that you are sending bytes

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