What's the name of signal encoding used by WS2812 LEDs? [duplicate]











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  • What encoding is used in this signal?

    4 answers




The WS2812b color LED uses some kind of duty cycle encoding to encode three states:




  • one

  • zero

  • reset


This can be seen in the following figure:
WS2812 Protocol



(Source: https://cpldcpu.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/ws2812_protocol.png)



What's the name of the used encoding?



It's not classic Pulse Width Modulation (PWM).



Edit:

While this question What encoding is used in this signal? asks for a name of a similar modulation, it does not give a name for the modulation.










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marked as duplicate by Ale..chenski, old_timer, Elliot Alderson, Dmitry Grigoryev, Finbarr Nov 26 at 12:42


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.















  • Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
    – old_timer
    Nov 25 at 19:47















up vote
1
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:




  • What encoding is used in this signal?

    4 answers




The WS2812b color LED uses some kind of duty cycle encoding to encode three states:




  • one

  • zero

  • reset


This can be seen in the following figure:
WS2812 Protocol



(Source: https://cpldcpu.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/ws2812_protocol.png)



What's the name of the used encoding?



It's not classic Pulse Width Modulation (PWM).



Edit:

While this question What encoding is used in this signal? asks for a name of a similar modulation, it does not give a name for the modulation.










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Ale..chenski, old_timer, Elliot Alderson, Dmitry Grigoryev, Finbarr Nov 26 at 12:42


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.















  • Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
    – old_timer
    Nov 25 at 19:47













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:




  • What encoding is used in this signal?

    4 answers




The WS2812b color LED uses some kind of duty cycle encoding to encode three states:




  • one

  • zero

  • reset


This can be seen in the following figure:
WS2812 Protocol



(Source: https://cpldcpu.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/ws2812_protocol.png)



What's the name of the used encoding?



It's not classic Pulse Width Modulation (PWM).



Edit:

While this question What encoding is used in this signal? asks for a name of a similar modulation, it does not give a name for the modulation.










share|improve this question
















This question already has an answer here:




  • What encoding is used in this signal?

    4 answers




The WS2812b color LED uses some kind of duty cycle encoding to encode three states:




  • one

  • zero

  • reset


This can be seen in the following figure:
WS2812 Protocol



(Source: https://cpldcpu.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/ws2812_protocol.png)



What's the name of the used encoding?



It's not classic Pulse Width Modulation (PWM).



Edit:

While this question What encoding is used in this signal? asks for a name of a similar modulation, it does not give a name for the modulation.





This question already has an answer here:




  • What encoding is used in this signal?

    4 answers








modulation digital-modulation ws2812b






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share|improve this question








edited Nov 25 at 21:51

























asked Nov 25 at 17:56









Paebbels

3,1412933




3,1412933




marked as duplicate by Ale..chenski, old_timer, Elliot Alderson, Dmitry Grigoryev, Finbarr Nov 26 at 12:42


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Ale..chenski, old_timer, Elliot Alderson, Dmitry Grigoryev, Finbarr Nov 26 at 12:42


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
    – old_timer
    Nov 25 at 19:47


















  • Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
    – old_timer
    Nov 25 at 19:47
















Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
– old_timer
Nov 25 at 19:47




Looks to be just a made up one. Not unusual to have a sync pattern then some data. You see similar ones used elsewhere, not having a global name either.
– old_timer
Nov 25 at 19:47










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote













AFAIK it doesn't have a fixed name, apart from 'the WS2812 protocol'. As described, it is a fixed-cell pulse-width encoding.



FYI: in practice, it isn't fixed-cell at all: provided that the pauses (T1L, T0L) are shorter than Treset, all that matters is the pulse width (T0H, T1H). This makes it a plain pulse-wdith encoding, and it makes bit-banging waaaaay easier.






share|improve this answer























  • This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
    – Ale..chenski
    Nov 25 at 20:36








  • 2




    I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
    – Wouter van Ooijen
    Nov 25 at 20:44


















up vote
0
down vote













This is what World-Semi calls it, they make the WS2812B




The data transfer protocol use single NZR communication mode. After the pixel power-on reset, the DIN
port receive data from controller, the first pixel collect initial 24bit data then sent to the internal data latch,
the other data which reshaping by the internal signal reshaping amplification circuit sent to the next cascade
pixel through the DO port. After transmission for each pixel,the signal to reduce 24bit. pixel adopt auto resha
-ping transmit technology, making the pixel cascade number is not limited the signal transmission, only depend
on the speed of signal transmission.







share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 0:36






  • 1




    The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 1:36










  • I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 8:32










  • Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 15:27


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
5
down vote













AFAIK it doesn't have a fixed name, apart from 'the WS2812 protocol'. As described, it is a fixed-cell pulse-width encoding.



FYI: in practice, it isn't fixed-cell at all: provided that the pauses (T1L, T0L) are shorter than Treset, all that matters is the pulse width (T0H, T1H). This makes it a plain pulse-wdith encoding, and it makes bit-banging waaaaay easier.






share|improve this answer























  • This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
    – Ale..chenski
    Nov 25 at 20:36








  • 2




    I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
    – Wouter van Ooijen
    Nov 25 at 20:44















up vote
5
down vote













AFAIK it doesn't have a fixed name, apart from 'the WS2812 protocol'. As described, it is a fixed-cell pulse-width encoding.



FYI: in practice, it isn't fixed-cell at all: provided that the pauses (T1L, T0L) are shorter than Treset, all that matters is the pulse width (T0H, T1H). This makes it a plain pulse-wdith encoding, and it makes bit-banging waaaaay easier.






share|improve this answer























  • This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
    – Ale..chenski
    Nov 25 at 20:36








  • 2




    I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
    – Wouter van Ooijen
    Nov 25 at 20:44













up vote
5
down vote










up vote
5
down vote









AFAIK it doesn't have a fixed name, apart from 'the WS2812 protocol'. As described, it is a fixed-cell pulse-width encoding.



FYI: in practice, it isn't fixed-cell at all: provided that the pauses (T1L, T0L) are shorter than Treset, all that matters is the pulse width (T0H, T1H). This makes it a plain pulse-wdith encoding, and it makes bit-banging waaaaay easier.






share|improve this answer














AFAIK it doesn't have a fixed name, apart from 'the WS2812 protocol'. As described, it is a fixed-cell pulse-width encoding.



FYI: in practice, it isn't fixed-cell at all: provided that the pauses (T1L, T0L) are shorter than Treset, all that matters is the pulse width (T0H, T1H). This makes it a plain pulse-wdith encoding, and it makes bit-banging waaaaay easier.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 25 at 19:49

























answered Nov 25 at 18:02









Wouter van Ooijen

44k150117




44k150117












  • This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
    – Ale..chenski
    Nov 25 at 20:36








  • 2




    I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
    – Wouter van Ooijen
    Nov 25 at 20:44


















  • This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
    – Ale..chenski
    Nov 25 at 20:36








  • 2




    I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
    – Wouter van Ooijen
    Nov 25 at 20:44
















This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
– Ale..chenski
Nov 25 at 20:36






This looks like a variant of 1-wire protocol encoding scheme, also referred as "PWM", in this case it looks like 33/66% PWM. The protocol was invented by Dallas Semiconductor, now a part of MAXIM. home.roboticlab.eu/en/examples/sensor/1-wire
– Ale..chenski
Nov 25 at 20:36






2




2




I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
– Wouter van Ooijen
Nov 25 at 20:44




I don't see what this unidirectional protocol has to do with the bi-directional dallas/maxim 1-wire protocol. And IMO PWM is a strange term to describe this protocol, because it isn't a Modulation, it is an Encoding. So yes, it is a pulse-width encodong, just like 1-wire, and dozens of others.
– Wouter van Ooijen
Nov 25 at 20:44












up vote
0
down vote













This is what World-Semi calls it, they make the WS2812B




The data transfer protocol use single NZR communication mode. After the pixel power-on reset, the DIN
port receive data from controller, the first pixel collect initial 24bit data then sent to the internal data latch,
the other data which reshaping by the internal signal reshaping amplification circuit sent to the next cascade
pixel through the DO port. After transmission for each pixel,the signal to reduce 24bit. pixel adopt auto resha
-ping transmit technology, making the pixel cascade number is not limited the signal transmission, only depend
on the speed of signal transmission.







share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 0:36






  • 1




    The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 1:36










  • I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 8:32










  • Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 15:27















up vote
0
down vote













This is what World-Semi calls it, they make the WS2812B




The data transfer protocol use single NZR communication mode. After the pixel power-on reset, the DIN
port receive data from controller, the first pixel collect initial 24bit data then sent to the internal data latch,
the other data which reshaping by the internal signal reshaping amplification circuit sent to the next cascade
pixel through the DO port. After transmission for each pixel,the signal to reduce 24bit. pixel adopt auto resha
-ping transmit technology, making the pixel cascade number is not limited the signal transmission, only depend
on the speed of signal transmission.







share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 0:36






  • 1




    The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 1:36










  • I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 8:32










  • Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 15:27













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









This is what World-Semi calls it, they make the WS2812B




The data transfer protocol use single NZR communication mode. After the pixel power-on reset, the DIN
port receive data from controller, the first pixel collect initial 24bit data then sent to the internal data latch,
the other data which reshaping by the internal signal reshaping amplification circuit sent to the next cascade
pixel through the DO port. After transmission for each pixel,the signal to reduce 24bit. pixel adopt auto resha
-ping transmit technology, making the pixel cascade number is not limited the signal transmission, only depend
on the speed of signal transmission.







share|improve this answer












This is what World-Semi calls it, they make the WS2812B




The data transfer protocol use single NZR communication mode. After the pixel power-on reset, the DIN
port receive data from controller, the first pixel collect initial 24bit data then sent to the internal data latch,
the other data which reshaping by the internal signal reshaping amplification circuit sent to the next cascade
pixel through the DO port. After transmission for each pixel,the signal to reduce 24bit. pixel adopt auto resha
-ping transmit technology, making the pixel cascade number is not limited the signal transmission, only depend
on the speed of signal transmission.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 25 at 23:38









CrossRoads

9487




9487












  • This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 0:36






  • 1




    The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 1:36










  • I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 8:32










  • Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 15:27


















  • This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 0:36






  • 1




    The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 1:36










  • I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
    – Paebbels
    Nov 26 at 8:32










  • Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
    – CrossRoads
    Nov 26 at 15:27
















This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
– Paebbels
Nov 26 at 0:36




This does not answer my question. I asked for the signal modulation name, but not how communication works.
– Paebbels
Nov 26 at 0:36




1




1




The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
– CrossRoads
Nov 26 at 1:36




The question was "What's the name of the used encoding?" The manufacturer calls it "single NZR communication mode". I think that does answer the question.
– CrossRoads
Nov 26 at 1:36












I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
– Paebbels
Nov 26 at 8:32




I get your point, but I believe this is a typo. There is no NZR code (according to Google), but NRZ (Non-Return to Zero`). NRZ is a general term and the basis for many codes.
– Paebbels
Nov 26 at 8:32












Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
– CrossRoads
Nov 26 at 15:27




Next suggestion would be to browse the Adafruit Neopixel library of the FastLED.h library and see if they call it something else.
– CrossRoads
Nov 26 at 15:27



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