No, that I know. However you can go with a PIC that has more program memory available. You can use this page to find the chip that you need.
http://www.microchip.com/maps/microcontroller.aspx
Robert
No, that I know. However you can go with a PIC that has more program memory available. You can use this page to find the chip that you need.
http://www.microchip.com/maps/microcontroller.aspx
Robert
"No one is completely worthless. They can always serve as a bad example."
Anonymous
If you are planning to use PBP then you may want to look at supported parts for PBP.
http://melabs.com/includes/compatibility/pbp.pics.htm
Go with an 18F for new projects.
Dave
Always wear safety glasses while programming.
Ok, so I chose the 18f4620, I have a new question though. When you compile your program in Microcode Studio and it tells you in the bottom left corner that your program uses (in my case) 1632 bytes, do I compare that to the chips 64K bytes of flash memory? I'm used to it telling me how many words I've used, not bytes.
here is the datasheet for the chip:
http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/e...Doc/39626b.pdf
"do I compare that to the chips 64K bytes of flash memory?"
Yes.
Dave
Always wear safety glasses while programming.
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