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A 1.8" LCD display module designed for the Raspberry Pi Pico, featuring 160 × 128 resolution and 65K RGB colours. It plugs directly onto the Pico via an onbo...

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A 1.8" LCD display module designed for the Raspberry Pi Pico, featuring 160 × 128 resolution and 65K RGB colours. It plugs directly onto the Pico via an onboard female pin header — no soldering required.

Driven by the ST7735S chip over SPI, this display uses minimal IO pins and comes with C/C++ and MicroPython example code to get you started quickly.

Key Features

  • Resolution – 160 × 128 pixels, 65K RGB colours
  • Driver – ST7735S
  • Interface – SPI (minimal IO pins required)
  • Connector – Female pin header for direct attachment to Raspberry Pi Pico
  • Example Code – C/C++ and MicroPython demos included

Ideal For

  • Raspberry Pi Pico projects needing a colour display
  • Graphical interfaces, data visualisation, and sensor readouts
  • Learning embedded display programming with MicroPython or C/C++

Package Contents

  • 1× Pico-LCD-1.8 display module
Note: Raspberry Pi Pico is not included.

Resources

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

LCD
LCD stands for liquid crystal display, a screen technology that uses a backlight and liquid crystals to show images or text. It matters because LCD modules usually need a display driver and enough controller pins or a bus interface to send image data.
MicroPython
A version of the Python programming language made to run on microcontrollers. It matters because it lets beginners write readable code to control LEDs, sensors, motors and displays without needing to start with lower-level languages.
RGB
Short for red, green and blue, usually referring to an LED that can mix those three colours. It matters because controlling an RGB LED teaches how separate outputs combine to create different colours.
SPI
A fast serial communication bus often used for displays, memory cards, and sensors. It matters because SPI devices need specific pins for clock and data, plus a separate chip-select line for each device.
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