A pythonic Xbox360 controller API built on top of the
xpad
Linux kernel driver.
This Python Package aims to provide a pythonic and complete API for your Xbox360 and similar game controllers.
Currently it's built on top of the Linux kernel driver xpad
so you can use it on almost any Linux distribution including your Raspberry Pi projects etc.
The following features are supported:
- Registering callbacks for all Buttons, Axes, Triggers and Hat in a
gpiozero
-inspired way - Setting the LED circle; all
xpad
provided options are possible: blinking, rotating, setting individual LEDs on and off, ... - Rumbling, both the left and right side can be controlled from 0 to 100 percent
You will need Python 3.4 or above.
Any Linux distribution:
pip3 install -U xbox360controller
You might also use a virtual environment or do a per-user install by providing the --user
flag to above command.
Global installations might require the usage of sudo
or working directly from a root shell but are not recommended.
If the pip3
command cannot be found, try pip
or make sure to have pip installed properly:
sudo apt install python3-pip
Of course you don't need sudo
when working from a root shell.
import signal
from xbox360controller import Xbox360Controller
def on_button_pressed(button):
print('Button {0} was pressed'.format(button.name))
def on_button_released(button):
print('Button {0} was released'.format(button.name))
def on_axis_moved(axis):
print('Axis {0} moved to {1} {2}'.format(axis.name, axis.x, axis.y))
try:
with Xbox360Controller(0, axis_threshold=0.2) as controller:
# Button A events
controller.button_a.when_pressed = on_button_pressed
controller.button_a.when_released = on_button_released
# Left and right axis move event
controller.axis_l.when_moved = on_axis_moved
controller.axis_r.when_moved = on_axis_moved
signal.pause()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
The above code will run until Ctrl+C
is pressed. Each time on of the left or right axis is moved, the event will be processed. Additionally, the events of the A button are being processed.
See the API reference for a more detailed explanation of the Xbox360Controller
class and how to use all available buttons, axes and the hat.
import time
from xbox360controller import Xbox360Controller
with Xbox360Controller() as controller:
controller.set_rumble(0.5, 0.5, 1000)
time.sleep(1)
This will enable rumble on both sides of the controller with each 50% strength for one second (1000ms). Note that the method call is non-blocking, thus we need to manually wait one second for the rumble to finish. You won't need this in a regular use case with signal.pause()
.
import time
from xbox360controller import Xbox360Controller
with Xbox360Controller() as controller:
controller.set_led(Xbox360Controller.LED_ROTATE)
time.sleep(1)
controller.set_led(Xbox360Controller.LED_OFF)
This will let the LED circle rotate for one second and then turn it off.
See the API reference for all available LED modes.
from xbox360controller import Xbox360Controller
with Xbox360Controller() as controller:
controller.info()
The output may look like this:
Microsoft X-Box 360 pad at index 0
Axes: 5
axis_l
axis_r
hat
trigger_l
trigger_r
Buttons: 11
button_a
button_b
button_x
button_y
button_trigger_l
button_trigger_r
button_select
button_start
button_mode
button_thumb_l
button_thumb_r
Rumble: yes
Driver version: 2.1.0 1.0.1
This project is now in a somewhat stable state, and I really appreciate all kinds of contributions - may it be new or improved code, documentation or just a simple typo fix. Just provide me a PR and I'll be happy to include your work!
For feature requests, general questions or problems you face regarding this package please open an issue.
Please see CHANGES.md
for a complete release history.
- Linus Groh (@linusg) – [email protected]
Thanks to @VidyaPuri and @jennib3 for pointing out installation issues and providing a fix!
All the code and documentation are distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE
for more information.