Bangle.js 2

Bangle.js is the successor to Bangle.js, and is based on the SMA Q3.

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Bangle.js 2 is an open, hackable smartwatch

You can easily install new apps from the web or develop your own using JavaScript or a graphical programming language (Blockly). All you need is a Web Browser (Chrome, Edge or Opera) and you can upload apps or write code to run on your watch wirelessly! Bangle.js is water resistant, AI enabled, and comes with Bluetooth Low Energy, GPS, a heart rate monitor, accelerometer and more.

Contents

Features

  • IP67 Water Resistant (everyday use, not swimming or baths)
  • Nordic 64MHz nRF52840 ARM Cortex-M4 processor with Bluetooth LE
  • 256kB RAM 1024kB on-chip flash, 8MB external flash (GD25Q64C/E)
  • 1.3 inch 176x176 always-on 3 bit colour LCD display (LPM013M126)
  • Full touchscreen (Hynitron CST816S)
  • Single button on side of watch
  • GPS/Glonass receiver (AT6558 / AT6558R)
  • Heart rate monitor (Vcare VC31 / VC31B)
  • 3 Axis Accelerometer (Kionix KX023)
  • 3 Axis Magnetometer
  • Air Pressure/Temperature sensor (Bosch BMP280 / Goertek SPL06)
  • Vibration motor
  • 175mAh battery, 4 weeks standby time
  • 36mm x 43mm x 12mm watch body, with standard 20mm watch straps

Quick Usage Notes

Check out the Bangle.js 2 Getting Started Guide

There are a few things to know that'll help you get started quickly:

  • Long-pressing the button (~2 seconds) will take you back to the default clock app
  • When the lock symbol is displayed in the top left hand corner, the touchscreen is not active. Unlocking can be configured in several ways via the settings app, but by default pressing the button will unlock the Bangle and allow you to use the touchscreen.
  • In the default App Launcher (which you get to by pressing the button while on the clock), drag the screen to scroll through apps, and tap the icon you want to launch
  • In text menus, drag up/down to scroll and tap to select
  • In numeric menus, drag up/down to change the number and tap to accept

This video shows you how to get started using the menu and App Loader:

Please check out The Bangle.js Wiki for more hints and common questions.

Contact Corrosion / Skin Irritation

Bangle.js 2 has 4 contacts on the rear. The two on the ends are used for charging and are not powered, however the middle two are SWD debug/programming pins connected straight to the CPU. One has a weak resistor connecting it to 3.3v. At most, 0.0001A of current at 3.3v can be provided, however if exposed to salty water (eg sweat) or other conductive conditions, the contacts will corrode and it is possible that in extreme cases there could be some skin irritation.

Bangle.js 2 devices sold since the KickStarter campaign ship with a small piece of tape covering the contacts to prevent any problems. If you have a watch without this tape we would strongly advise you apply some paint, tape, a sticker or laquer over the middle two contacts as shown in the images below:

Charging

The supplied charge cable connects to a USB port to charge Bangle.js (despite there being 4 wires, those are for SWD programming and there is no USB data connection).

Do not force the cable on to your Bangle.js If the cable does not pull itself on to the Bangle it's probably the wrong way around. Forcing it to make contact in this case could damage your Bangle.

The cable is magnetic and the wires are connected to USB power. While the cable in Bangle.js 2 does have short circuit protection, please do not leave your cable plugged in or it might attract itself to the nearest magnetic (probably conductive) object and short out.

DO NOT CONNECT A BANGLE.JS 1 CHARGE CABLE TO BANGLE.JS 2 - there are a different number of pins and connecting it could cause damage to your device.

We'll be selling new/replacement Bangle.js charge cables on shop.espruino.com soon, however until then (or if you need a cable next day) you can use:

Apps

Apps are provided by the same Bangle.js app loader as for Bangle.js 1, you just need to select Bangle.js 2 when prompted (or from the drop-down in the top left).

For iPhone users, web bluetooth is not supported by default with Safari. You will need a browser that has support for web bluetooth such as WebBLE. If your Bangle is paired for notifications, you will need to disconnect from the device for it to show up when you press the "Connect" button. This is due to an issue with the WebBLE browser, and there is an open issue for it.

Powering off

  • Enter the launcher by pressing the button to unlock, then pressing it again to enter the launcher (while showing a clock)
  • Tap on Settings
  • Select item Utilities
  • Scroll down to Turn off and tap again

Resetting

  • Long-press the button for about 6 seconds until the screen displays some pixellated text on the top line
  • Release the button
  • Bangle.js will boot as if it just turned on normally

If you release the button too late you'll enter bootloader mode, in which case you need to wait for 30 seconds for the watch to automatically exit.

Recovery menu

On 2v19 firmware and later, if something has gone wrong you can enter a Recovery menu:

  • Hold the button down. After around 6 seconds the screen goes blank and displays some pixellated text
  • Keep pressing the button while ==== goes across the screen
  • Keep holding the button while Bangle.js boots
  • You should now have the Bangle.js logo, version, and MAC address on screen, and you can release the button
  • You'll get to a Recovery screen with a few options:
    • Clean Boot - Start up Bangle.js without running any of the code on the watch
    • Reboot - reboot the watch
    • Turn off - turn off the watch
    • Factory Reset - wipe all data and settings from the watch and return it to the state that it came from the factory
    • Exit - exit the menu and boot normally
    • Attempt Compact - try compacting storage to free space - this may take a few minutes
    • Rewrite Bootloader - if the bootloader got corrupted (any settings you made on the watch are not taking effect) then re-writing it can help

Resetting without loading any code

If you uploaded some code that runs at startup and breaks Bangle.js you may need to do this.

2v19 firmware

Start the Recovery menu (see above) by holding the button at boot time, then choose Clean Boot

pre-2v19 firmware

It won’t delete anything, so unless you fix/remove the broken code (see "Deleting all Code") Bangle.js will remain broken next time it restarts.

  • Hold the button down. After around 6 seconds the screen goes blank and displays some pixellated text
  • Keep pressing the button while ==== goes across the screen
  • Keep holding the button while Bangle.js boots
  • You should now have the Bangle.js logo, version, and MAC address on screen, and you can release the button

Deleting all code

You can do this either while your watch is in its normal state, or if you have reset it without loading any code (above).

2v19 firmware

Start the Recovery menu (see above) by holding the button at boot time, then choose Factory Reset

pre-2v19 firmware

Either

This will erase everything and install just the default apps.

Or

  • Go to https://banglejs.com/apps
  • Go to More... -> Remove All Apps
  • Re-install Bootloader and a Clock from Library (this is all you need, but other apps are usually installed by default too)

Deleting apps

  • You can go to https://banglejs.com/apps and click Connect. Under My Apps your installed apps are listed, and you can click the 'Bin' icon next to them to remove them
  • If you can access the menus on your device and the App Manager app is installed, you can delete apps using the App Manager
  • If you hit any issues with installed apps and can't access the menus on your device, then follow the instructions above for "Resetting without loading any code" above.

Tutorials

In general, most tutorials related to Bangle.js 1 should work on Bangle.js 2, as long as you're aware that you only have one button and the screen resolution is different - see below under Information.

Upon release, specific Bangle.js 2 tutorials will be added here.

Tutorials using Bangle.js:

Tutorials using Bluetooth LE:

Tutorials using Bluetooth LE and functionality that may not be part of Bangle.js:

There are many more tutorials that may not be specifically for you device but will probably work with some tweaking. Try searching to find what you want.

Information

Certifications:

Power Consumption

  • Idle, accelerometer on 12.5Hz - 0.3mA
  • Idle, accelerometer on 1.25Hz (Bangle.setPollInterval(800)) - 0.15mA (default if not moved for ~120s)
  • Idle, clock (s7clk) updating once a second - 0.5mA
  • BLE Connected in high bandwidth mode - 0.75mA
  • Compass on, 12.5Hz - 5.5mA (+5mA)
  • Compass on, 1.25Hz (Bangle.setPollInterval(800)) - 0.9mA (+0.6mA)
  • Heart rate monitor on - 1.0mA (+0.7mA) (KickStarter version = ~1.5mA)
  • 100% CPU usage running JavaScript - 4mA (+3mA)
  • GPS on - 26mA (+25mA)
  • GPS on (set to GPS only) - 20mA (+19mA)
  • LCD touchscreen enabled (unlocked) - 2.8mA (+2.5mA)
  • LCD backlight on - 17mA (+16mA)
  • Turned off (Bangle.off - no RTC) - 0.02mA
  • Turned off (Bangle.softOff) - 0.03mA

Right now you can expect around 1 month of battery life with a clock that updates once a minute, using the latest firmware.

A clock that updates once a second all the time (like s7clk) will reduce the battery life to 2 weeks, and more complicated clocks can increase the power draw further.

LCD Screen

Bangle.js displays the REPL (JavaScript console) if Debug Info: show has been set in settings. If enabled, any calls like print("Hello") or console.log("World") will output to the LCD when there is no computer connected via Bluetooth. Any errors generated when there is no connection will also be displayed on the LCD.

Graphics

You can output graphics on Bangle.js's display via the global variable g that is an instance of the Graphics class. Unlike Bangle.js 1, the display is buffered so changes to the display will only take effect when you call g.flip() or your code finishes executing and Bangle.js returns to idle.

// Draw a pattern with lines
g.clear();
for (i=0;i<64;i+=7.9) g.drawLine(0,i,i,63);
g.drawString("Hello World",30,30);

Bangle.js comes with a built-in menu library that can be accessed with the E.showMenu() command.

E.showPrompt() and E.showMessage() can also be used for simple prompts and full-screen messages.

// Two variables to update
var boolean = false;
var number = 50;
// First menu
var mainmenu = {
  "" : {
    "title" : "-- Main Menu --"
  },
  "Beep" : function() { Bangle.beep(); },
  "Buzz" : function() { Bangle.buzz(); },
  "Submenu" : function() { E.showMenu(submenu); },
  "A Boolean" : {
    value : boolean,
    format : v => v?"On":"Off",
    onchange : v => { boolean=v; }
  },
  "A Number" : {
    value : number,
    min:0,max:100,step:10,
    onchange : v => { number=v; }
  },
  "Exit" : function() { E.showMenu(); },
};
// Submenu
var submenu = {
  "" : {
    "title" : "-- SubMenu --"
  },
  "One" : undefined, // do nothing
  "Two" : undefined, // do nothing
  "< Back" : function() { E.showMenu(mainmenu); },
};
// Actually display the menu
E.showMenu(mainmenu);

See http://www.espruino.com/graphical_menu for more detailed information.

Terminal

Bangle.js's LCD acts as a VT100 Terminal. To write text to the LCD regardless of connection state you can use Terminal.println("your text"). Scrolling and simple VT100 control characters will be honoured.

You can even move the JavaScript console (REPL) to the LCD while connected via Bluetooth, and use your bluetooth connection as a simple keyboard using the following commands:

Bluetooth.on("data",d=>Terminal.inject(d));
Terminal.setConsole();

Screenshots

On Bangle.js 2, there's an offscreen buffer for the display (described above). As a result it is possible to create a screenshot of what's on the display with a simple command. Just type:

g.dump()

In the left-hand side of the IDE. The contents of the screen will then be copied into the Web IDE. From there you can copy or even right-click and save to a PNG file.

On-device Peripherals

Most peripherals on the device are accessible via fields and events on the Bangle object.

Touchscreen

Bangle.js 2 has a full touchscreen.

Bangle.on('touch', function(zone,e) { ... }); will call the function with e as an object containing {x,y} every time the screen is tapped (when unlocked).

Bangle.on('drag', function(e) { ... }); will call the function with e as an object containing {x,y,dx,dy,b} whenever a finger is dragged over the screen. b is 0 when the finger is lifted or 1 when pressed.

Bangle.on('stroke', function(e) { ... }); will call the function with e as an object containing {xy:newUint8Array(x1,y1,x2,y2,...), stroke:string/undefined} whenever a finger has been dragged over the screen for more that half the screen's distance.

stroke will only be set in the stroke event if Bangle.strokes has been set up with a series of strokes to recognise. To do this, use some code as follows. The array passed to Unistroke.new needs to be a Uint8Array of XY coordinates (as you might get from xy in the stroke event).

Bangle.strokes = {
  up : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([57, 151, 57, 147, 58, 136, 61, 119, 65, 102, 70, 88, 74, 78, 80, 71, 86, 70, 94, 72, 107, 79, 129, 97, 140, 110, 147, 120, 152, 127, 156, 134, 158, 137])),
  cw : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([91, 60, 93, 60, 98, 60, 108, 60, 121, 61, 131, 64, 137, 70, 139, 81, 139, 96, 135, 111, 128, 126, 119, 136, 108, 140, 97, 141, 86, 139, 75, 134, 70, 126, 66, 115, 64, 100, 65, 88, 69, 78, 75, 71, 81, 67, 84, 63])
),
 ccw : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([114, 71, 112, 71, 108, 71, 102, 71, 93, 72, 82, 76, 71, 81, 62, 88, 56, 97, 53, 107, 54, 116, 59, 127, 70, 137, 86, 142, 103, 145, 115, 144, 124, 143, 131, 136, 135, 122, 131, 99, 124, 83, 115, 72])
),
 alpha : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([161, 55, 160, 58, 158, 62, 155, 71, 149, 81, 141, 97, 132, 114, 119, 129, 107, 140, 96, 147, 86, 151, 77, 154, 69, 153, 59, 149, 49, 143, 40, 133, 31, 117, 28, 104, 27, 90, 28, 78, 34, 71, 44, 69, 60, 72, 84, 84, 111, 107, 132, 128, 146, 144, 154, 155, 159, 161])),
 right : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([49, 52, 54, 52, 68, 57, 90, 65, 114, 76, 134, 84, 148, 91, 157, 95, 163, 98, 167, 100, 169, 102, 168, 105, 163, 114, 147, 126, 127, 137, 107, 147, 94, 152, 82, 156, 72, 159])),
double : Unistroke.new(new Uint8Array([75, 61, 87, 61, 117, 68, 142, 85, 147, 111, 129, 134, 92, 140, 59, 133, 45, 116, 50, 89, 86, 72, 128, 88, 138, 121, 108, 138, 68, 129, 56, 104, 57, 90]))
};

LED

There are two 'fake' LED variables called LED1 and LED2 that create red and green fake LEDs at the top of the watch screen - these serve no purpose other than to allow tutorials for existing Espruino boards to be used.

If you want to control the backlight LED use Bangle.setLCDBrightness.

Vibrate

Bangle.buzz() will make Bangle.js's vibration motor turn on. It takes optional time and strength arguments, and returns a promise. See the reference.

For example:

Bangle.buzz().then(()=>{
  return new Promise(resolve=>setTimeout(resolve,500)); // wait 500ms
}).then(()=>{
  return Bangle.buzz(1000);
}).then(()=>{
  console.log("Done");
});

Will do a short buzz followed by a long buzz and will print Done when finished.

Sound

You can use Bangle.beep() in much the same way as .buzz above to make sounds. See the reference.

To output an entire scale of notes, you could do:

Bangle.beep(200,207.65*8).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,220.00*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,246.94*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,261.63*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,293.66*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,329.63*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,369.99*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,392.00*8)).then(
()=>Bangle.beep(200,440.00*8));

Note: Bangle.js 2 does not contain a piezo speaker, but instead uses the vibration motor for sound. This means that while you can get some sound, it is extremely weak.

Buttons

There is just one button on Bangle.js - called BTN or BTN1 in code.

  • You can access a button's state with digitalRead(BTN1) or BTN1.read() (the two commands are identical). BTN is also defined, and is the same as BTN1.
  • Polling to get the button state wastes power, so it's better to use setWatch to call a function whenever the button changes state:
setWatch(function() {
  console.log("Pressed");
}, BTN, {edge:"rising", debounce:50, repeat:true});

Accelerometer

The accelerometer runs all the time and produces accel events on the Bangle object.

Bangle.on('accel', function(acc) {
  // acc = {x,y,z,diff,mag}
});

See the reference for more information.

Gestures

When a sudden movement is detected, the accelerations in it are recorded and a gesture event is created.

If .tfmodel and .tfnames files are created in storage, Tensorflow AI will be run on the model with the gesture information and an aiGesture event will be created with the name of the detected gesture.

Compass

The compass can be turned on with Bangle.setCompassPower(1) and when enabled, mag events are created 12.5 times a second:

Bangle.setCompassPower(1)
Bangle.on('mag', function(mag) {
  // mag = {x,y,z,dx,dy,dz,heading}
});

See the reference for more information.

Barometer / air pressure sensor

To use the barometer, you can either request one pressure value:

Bangle.getPressure().then(print)
// prints this after ~1 sec
// { "temperature": 23.03918464465, "pressure": 1005.56287398937, "altitude": 64.19805781010 }

Or can request to be notified on each new reading:

Bangle.setBarometerPower(true)
Bangle.on('pressure', print)
// prints...
{ "temperature": 23.14690527655, "pressure": 1005.79911673786, "altitude": 62.21919777595 }
{ "temperature": 23.14200888113, "pressure": 1005.84599901953, "altitude": 61.82653852506 }
{ "temperature": 23.14200888113, "pressure": 1005.79091150423, "altitude": 62.28792165657 }
{ "temperature": 23.14690527655, "pressure": 1005.79911673786, "altitude": 62.21919777595 }

See the reference for more information.

GPS

The GPS can be turned on with Bangle.setGPSPower(1) and when enabled, GPS events are created once a second:

Bangle.setGPSPower(1)
Bangle.on('GPS', function(gps) {
  // gps = {lat,lon,alt,speed,etc}
});

GPS-raw events are also created containing a String for each NMEA line that comes from the GPS receiver. These contain far more detailed information from the GPS.

See the reference for more information.

Advanced GPS

For more information GPS commands see the Technical Information Page

Hardware SWD

Bangle.js 2 has the hardware SWD pin brought out on the back of the watch along with the charging pins:

For more information see the Technical Information Page

Firmware Updates

App Loader

Bangle.js 2 provides its own firmware update mechanism using the App Loader.

On Bangle.js 2 this is the recommended method (although other methods still work). Simply click on the icon to the right of the Firmware Update app and follow the instructions.

The firmware will upload to Bangle.js, and when it is complete, Bangle.js will restart and install the firmware.

Note: KickStarter Bangles that shipped with 2v10 firmware will have 2v10 bootloaders which need updating before you use the firmware updater. Just follow the instructions on the Firmware Update page to update your bootloader.

DFU

Please see the Firmware Update page for detailed instructions.

Troubleshooting

Check out:

Other Official Espruino Boards

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