What is i2c start condition?
Ava Robinson
Updated on May 10, 2026
Accordingly, what does i2c stand for?
I2C. Short for Inter-IC, a type of bus designed by Philips Semiconductors in the early 1980s, which is used to connect integrated circuits (ICs). I2C is a multi-master bus, which means that multiple chips can be connected to the same bus and each one can act as a master by initiating a data transfer.
Subsequently, question is, how does an i2c bus work? I2C is a serial communication protocol, so data is transferred bit by bit along a single wire (the SDA line). Like SPI, I2C is synchronous, so the output of bits is synchronized to the sampling of bits by a clock signal shared between the master and the slave. The clock signal is always controlled by the master.
Regarding this, what is an i2c device?
I2C is a serial protocol for two-wire interface to connect low-speed devices like microcontrollers, EEPROMs, A/D and D/A converters, I/O interfaces and other similar peripherals in embedded systems. It was invented by Philips and now it is used by almost all major IC manufacturers.
Is i2c MSB first?
The first seven bits, which follow after START condition, contain I2C slave address. As any other data, the address is transmitted sequentially, starting with the most significant bit (MSB) and ending with the least significant bit (LSB).