Colour-coded Pi Zero W boards
By Lucy Hattersley. Posted

Advertisement
The desktop computer you've been waiting for: Raspberry Pi 500+
Pi Supply has released a pair of Pi Zero boards with colour-coded GPIO pins, as well as a separate colour-coded header, to make your mini-builds a bit easier.
As John Whiting, director of marketing for Pi Supply, explains, “A lot of users have struggled in the past remembering the GPIO layout, so the coloured header is a low-cost way of not having to remember the layout or go off and Google it.”
Colour-coded Pi Zero W header
The colour-coding follows the usual convention, where red is +5 V, yellow is +3.3 V (also referred to as 3V3), black is ground, blue is DNC (or reversed I2C), and green shows the GPIO pins.
“The reaction has been great”, John tells us. “We’ve had many users say how helpful this GPIO header is, particularly for beginners.”
John adds that “we hope to see a colour-coded header on the main Raspberry Pi boards in the future!”
The colour-coded Pi Zero 1.3 costs £9.16, the Pi Zero W £12.50, and the header only £1.25, all from uk.pi-supply.com.

Lucy is Editor of Raspberry Pi Official Magazine.
Subscribe to Raspberry Pi Official Magazine
Save up to 37% off the cover price and get a FREE Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W with a subscription to Raspberry Pi Official Magazine.
More articles

Raspberry Pi 500+ in Raspberry Pi Official Magazine issue 158
We’re quite taken with Raspberry Pi 500+. But when you don’t need all that processing power, and just want a board that will make a plastic skeleton jump around in a terrifying manner, you’ll find Raspberry Pi Pico more than up to the job. There’s more terror in the magazine (which is only right as […]
Read more →

Win one of five Raspberry Pi SSD 1TB
Raspberry Pi prides itself on high quality hardware, and this 1TB Raspberry Pi SSD is no different. You can use it with a standard Raspberry Pi or even in your desktop PC – the choice is yours. We have five to give away and you can enter below Win 1 of 5 Raspberry Pi SSD […]
Read more →

Dual-screen cyberdeck
Twin screens mean you can code on one screen while watching David Bowie’s 1978 Musikladen show on the other.
Read more →
Sign up to the newsletter
Get every issue delivered directly to your inbox and keep up to date with the latest news, offers, events, and more.