SBOS545D February 2011 – December 2018 TMP103
PRODUCTION DATA.
Accessing a particular register on the TMP103 is accomplished by writing the appropriate value to the Pointer Register. The value for the Pointer Register is the first byte transferred after the slave address byte with the R/W bit low. Every write operation to the TMP103 requires a value for the Pointer Register (see Figure 2).
When reading from the TMP103, the last value stored in the Pointer Register by a write operation is used to determine which register is read by a read operation. To change the register pointer for a read operation, a new value must be written to the Pointer Register. This action is accomplished by issuing a slave address byte with the R/W bit low, followed by the Pointer Register byte. No additional data are required. The master can then generate a START condition and send the slave address byte with the R/W bit high to initiate the read command. See Figure 3 for details of this sequence. If repeated reads from the same register are desired, it is not necessary to continually send the Pointer Register bytes; the TMP103 remembers the Pointer Register value until it is changed by the next write operation, or the TMP103 is reset.