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+.. highlight:: cpp
+
+.. _arduino-compatibility:
+
+=============================
+ Maple-Arduino Compatibility
+=============================
+
+.. contents:: Contents
+ :local:
+
+Overview
+--------
+
+The biggest difference between the Maple and most Arduino boards is
+that the Maple uses a 32-bit ARM Cortex-M3 architecture chip, while
+the Arduinos have 8-bit Atmel AVR chips. The different instruction set
+means that machine code (which makes up executable binary programs) is
+incompatible between the two, and a different compiler (actually just
+a different version of `gcc <http://gcc.gnu.org/>`_) is required.
+
+The compiler for the regular Arduino IDE is the popular `avr-gcc
+<http://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/>`_ package; the compiler for the
+Maple version of the IDE is CodeSourcery's edition of gcc for the ARM
+EABI target (:command:`arm-non-eabi-gcc`). A (preliminary) reference
+on :ref:`using arm-none-eabi-gcc <arm-gcc>` is available.
+
+The bitwidth of the processor means that the Maple can process 32-bit
+operations (like adding or multiplying two 32-bit integers) in a
+single instruction, while an Arduino processor would have to split up
+large operations into several smaller ones. In a lot of cases 8-bit
+operations are plenty (integers 0-255, single characters of text,
+etc.), but if you're dealing with higher resolution data, the speed up
+could be significant.
+
+A trade-off is that code could be larger as well; program instructions
+and memory locations can be up to 32 bits each. However, removal of
+extra instructions and fancy packing together of simple instructions
+means that programs aren't much larger (or are even smaller).
+
+Header Numbering and Incompatibilities
+--------------------------------------
+
+.. FIXME [Maple-specific values]
+
+The numbering of headers is different; on the Maple each GPIO has a
+unique number: 0, 1, 2, all the way up to 37 (actually, there are
+:ref:`a few more <lang-disabledebugports>`...). On the Arduino, the
+analog pins are numbered separately (A0-A5) from the digital pins (D0\
+-D13).
+
+The incompatible hardware differences are:
+
+* :ref:`I2C <i2c>` **port**: on most Arduinos, the |i2c| port is Analog
+ Input 4 (SDA) and Analog Input 5 (SCL); on the Maple, |i2c| port 1
+ is D5 (SCL) and D9 (SDA), and |i2c| port 2 is D29 (SCL) and D30
+ (SDA).
+
+ It should be possible to skywire, sacrificing signal quality (due to
+ increased capacitance). Alternatively, |i2c| can be bit-banged
+ reasonably well in software. This peripheral could potentially be
+ rerouted internally, but we haven't looked into it.
+
+* :ref:`PWM <pwm>` **on D10**: all the other standard Arduino PWM
+ headers have PWM functionality on the Maple (D2,D3,D6,D9,D11), but
+ not D10.
+
+* **No External Voltage Reference**: The Arduino has an AREF pin which
+ allows the use of an external ADC voltage reference; the Maple has
+ an extra GPIO pin (D14) with PWM capability in this spot, and does
+ not allow an external voltage reference to be configured.
+
+* **EEPROM**: the Maple does not have any internal EEPROM. This
+ functionality can be emulated with regular persistent flash memory,
+ or with an external EEPROM chip.
+
+* **ISP Programming**: the Maple does not use an ISP/ICSP bus for
+ debugging; it uses :ref:`JTAG <jtag>`.
+
+
+Software Language/Library Changes
+---------------------------------
+
+With :ref:`a few exceptions <language-missing-features>`, the entire
+Wiring/Arduino language is supported. However, there are some subtle
+differences, most of which are improvements:
+
+* **32-bit integers**: many standard functions either expect or return
+ full 32-bit (4 byte) integer values instead of the regular 16-bit (2
+ byte) Arduino values.
+
+* **64-bit doubles**: The :ref:`double <lang-double>` type is a full
+ double-precision floating point type on the Maple; it is a
+ single-precision floating point value on the Arduino.
+
+* :ref:`pinMode() <lang-pinmode>` **types**: any :ref:`GPIO <gpio>`
+ (including analog pins) can be configured into one of the following
+ modes with a single call to ``pinMode()``: ``OUTPUT``,
+ ``OUTPUT_OPEN_DRAIN``, ``INPUT_FLOATING``, ``INPUT_PULLUP``,
+ ``INPUT_PULLDOWN``. Additionally, the PWM pins (labeled "PWM" on the
+ silkscreen) can be configured in ``PWM`` and ``PWM_OPEN_DRAIN``
+ modes, and the analog input pins (labeled "AIN") can be configured
+ in ``INPUT_ANALOG`` mode. See the :ref:`GPIO documentation <gpio>`
+ for more information.
+
+* :ref:`Serial port <lang-serial>` **syntax**: like the `Arduino Mega
+ <http://arduino.cc/en/Main/ArduinoBoardMega>`_, the Maple has
+ multiple :ref:`USART ports <lang-serial>`. By default, ``Serial``
+ is not mapped to any of them. Use ``Serial1`` through ``Serial3``
+ instead.
+
+* **16-bit** :ref:`PWM <pwm>`: Arduino boards support 8-bit PWM, which
+ means that calls to :ref:`analogWrite() <lang-analogwrite>` take
+ values between 0 (always off) and 255 (always on). The Maple
+ supports 16-bit PWM, so the corresponding values should be between 0
+ (always off) and 65535 (always on).
+
+* **12-bit** :ref:`ADC <adc>`: Arduino boards support 10-bit ADC, which
+ means that calls to :ref:`analogRead() <lang-analogread>` will
+ return values between 0 and 1023. The Maple supports 12-bit ADC, so
+ the same call will instead return values between 0 and 4095.
+
+Shield and Device Compatibility
+-------------------------------
+
+**Can't find your shield?** Check out the `Compatible Shields
+<http://wiki.leaflabs.com/index.php?title=Compatible_Shields>`_ page
+on our wiki.
+
+.. list-table::
+ :header-rows: 1
+
+ * - Shield/Device
+ - Compatible?
+ - Notes
+
+ * - Ethernet shield
+ - Yes!
+ - Tested; no library yet
+
+ * - WiFi Shield
+ - Yes!
+ - Tested; preliminary library support
+
+ * - MIDI shield
+ - Yes!
+ - Tested; no library yet
+
+ * - XBee shield
+ - Unknown
+ -
+
+ * - Bluetooth shield
+ - Unknown
+ - Some Bluetooth <-> UART boards have been tested and are known
+ to work.
+
+ * - Cellular shield
+ - Unknown
+ -
+
+Library Porting Status
+----------------------
+
+The state of currently ported Arduino libraries is the
+:ref:`libraries`.
+
+.. TODO Update as libraries are ported.
+
+.. list-table::
+ :header-rows: 1
+
+
+ * - Library
+ - Ported?
+ - Notes
+
+ * - Wire
+ - Preliminary
+ - In progress; see :ref:`library reference <libraries-wire>`.
+
+ * - LiquidCrystal
+ - **Yes**
+ - :ref:`Included since IDE 0.0.7 <libraries-liquid-crystal>`
+
+ * - Ethernet
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+ * - EEPROM
+ - (Unsupported) third-party emulation
+ - The Maple doesn't have EEPROM; it uses flash instead. There is
+ an `EEPROM emulation library
+ <http://akb77.com/g/stm32/maple-eeprom-emulation-library/>`_ by
+ `x893 <http://akb77.com/g/>`_, but we haven't tested it.
+
+ * - Firmata
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+ * - Matrix
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+ * - Servo
+ - **Yes**
+ - :ref:`Included since IDE 0.0.9 <libraries-servo>`
+
+ * - SoftwareSerial
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+ * - Sprite
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+ * - Stepper
+ - Not yet
+ - Planned
+
+Sketch and Library Porting HOWTO
+--------------------------------
+
+In addition to the suggestions in this section, you may find many of
+the individual :ref:`language reference <language>` pages useful. As
+appropriate, these have "Arduino Compatibility" sections; one good
+example is the :ref:`analogWrite() <lang-analogwrite-compatibility>`
+function.
+
+- Check the hardware and header differences above, and see if your
+ project or shield needs to be modified (eg, add 3.3V level
+ converters or reroute PWM to header D10).
+
+- Check for ported library functionality. We intend to port all of the
+ core and popular libraries (like Wire, Ethernet, and the LCD screen
+ driver), but this task is not yet finished. (:ref:`Patches are
+ welcome! <libmaple-contributing>`).
+
+- Check for peripheral conflicts; changing the configuration of timers
+ and bus speeds for a feature on one header may impact all the
+ features on that hardware "port". For example, changing the timer
+ prescaler to do long PWM pulses could impact |i2c| communications on
+ nearby headers.
+
+- Rewrite any low-level code. This could potentially be very
+ difficult, but hopefully you've used the Arduino libraries to
+ abstract away the registers and other hardware-specific
+ details. Your sketch probably doesn't have any low-level code; a
+ library which wraps a particular peripheral very well may. Some
+ help is available in the :ref:`arm-gcc` reference.
+
+- Redeclare variable sizes if necessary: generics like ``int`` will
+ probably work unless you depend on side-effects like rollover.
+
+- Check every ``pinMode()``: the Maple has more modes for GPIO
+ pins. For example, make sure to set analog pins to ``INPUT_ANALOG``
+ before reading and PWM pins to ``PWM`` before writing. The full set
+ of pin modes is documented in the :ref:`lang-pinmode` reference.
+
+- Modify PWM writes: ``pinMode()`` must be set to ``PWM``, the
+ frequency of the PWM pulse configured, and the duty cycle written
+ with up to 16-bit resolution.
+
+- Modify ADC reads: :ref:`lang-analogread` takes the full pin number
+ (not 0-5) and returns a full 12-bit reading. The ADC pin must have
+ its ``pinMode()`` set to ``INPUT_ANALOG``.
+
+- Possibly convert all Serial-over-USB communications to use
+ :ref:`lang-serialusb` instead of a USART :ref:`serial port
+ <lang-serial>`. The Maple has a dedicated USB port which is not
+ connected to the USART TX/RX pins in any way.
+
+- Check timing: Maple clock cycles are just 13.9 nanoseconds, though
+ the peripheral bus speeds (which limit GPIO output) are clocked
+ slower.