Product overview
Description
The STM32L1xx standard peripherals library, called STSW-STM32077, covers 3 abstraction levels, and includes a complete register address mapping with all bits, bitfields and registers declared in C. This avoids a cumbersome task and more important, it brings the benefits of a bug free reference mapping file, speeding up the early project phase.
The STSW-STM32077 also includes a collection of routines and data structures covering all peripheral functions (drivers with common API). It can directly be used as a reference framework, since it also includes macros for supporting core-related intrinsic features, common constants, and definition of data types.
Moreover a set of examples covering all available peripherals with template projects for the most common development tools. With the appropriate hardware evaluation board, this allows to get started with a brand-new micro within few hours.
Each driver consists of a set of functions covering all peripheral features. The development of each driver is driven by a common API (application programming interface) which standardizes the driver structure, the functions and the parameter names.
The driver source code is developed in ‘Strict ANSI-C’ (relaxed ANSI-C for projects and example files). It is fully documented and is MISRA®-C 2004 compliant. Writing the whole library in ‘Strict ANSI-C’ makes it independent from the development tools. Only the start-up files depend on the development tools. Thanks to the standard peripherals library, low-level implementation details are transparent so that reusing code on a different MCU requires only to reconfigure the compiler. As a result, developers can easily migrate designs across the STM32 series to quickly bring product line extensions to market without any redesign. In addition, the library is built around a modular architecture that makes it easy to tailor and run it on the same MCU using hardware platforms different from ST evaluation boards.
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All features
- Low level drivers covering all STM32L1xx peripherals, developed in ‘Strict ANSI-C’
- 83 examples for 24 different peripherals
- Template project for 3 different IDEs