These allow easy expansion of the Nucleo open development platform functionality with a wide choice of specialized shields. The STM8 Nucleo-64 boards are made by ST and have Arduino Uno V3 connectivity support and ST morpho headers. They have an integrated ST-Link or ST-Link/v2 though, which makes them ideal for getting started with little effort and cost. The STM8-Discovery are cheap boards made by ST that tend have only very few peripherals included. Many very cheap boards do not come with pin headers at all. The ones featured here are a bit atypical since most come with pin headers already mounted. They are typically made by unnamed manufacturers. These are very simple and cheap boards that have an STM8 ♜, but very little else included. stm8flash, to write programs onto devices. The C compiler SDCC, version 3.5.0 or later to compile C programs for the STM8.The author used a Debian GNU/Linux system, but the tutorials should work for other Linux distributions, *BSD or other Unices. The tutorials include an LED TIMER, which shows a binary counter that increments exactly once per second using the board LEDs and the STM8 timers, RS232 output using the STM8 UART, and standard benchmarks for embedded systems (both Whetstone and Dhrystone Coremark is not included due to its license, but can easily be ported using the Whetstone and Dhrystone tutorials as examples). This is a collection of tutorials that show how to get started with STM8 development using free tools and various evaluation boards.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |