2025-03-21 7:57 AM
Not sure whether its me looking at the wrong places but I can't find the project that came with the Nucleo-FR401RE eval board? Looked under the STM32CubeF4 examples, nothing seems to match.
Can somebody point me to the right place?
Thanks
-- Alex
Solved! Go to Solution.
2025-10-30 1:30 AM
2025-03-24 5:54 AM
Hello @armDevCP,
A request to share the binary demo file has been reported internally.
Internal ticket number: 205994
With Regards,
2025-03-24 7:41 AM
Thanks for letting me know about the internal ticket.
This request was submitted back in July-2024. How long does it take to upload the demonstration code to the repo?
It would be nice to expedite this request.
-- Alex
2025-10-30 1:30 AM
2025-10-31 4:47 AM
2025-10-31 6:45 AM
Hello @waclawek.jan ,
Thank you for your question. Each STM32 hardware board has its own dedicated demo available on its specific hardware board page on the official ST website (ST.com). You can find the binaries, source code, and detailed instructions there.
For example, for the STM32F4 series, such as the NUCLEO-F401RE board, please follow these steps in the screenshot below to access the demo binaries:
in the end of the page you will find the demo binary package :
Br
2025-10-31 7:14 AM
This seems to be a (fairly) new feature of the Product Page ?
Hasn't reached all boards yet; eg, https://www.st.com/en/evaluation-tools/stm32f0discovery.html#tools-software
2025-11-01 1:24 PM - edited 2025-11-01 1:35 PM
Hi @MOBEJ ,
Thanks for your reponse.
There used to be a way to have a list of all the available binaries for a certain cathegory of boards.
Now it's under a different cathegory (granted "Documentation" was not the best fit), but I can't see any file/link there:
JW
[EDIT] Before I wrote this post, I've reloaded that page several times, clicked at all available clickable things, and the result was always an empty page such as at the screenshot. After I've wrote this post, I reloaded the page once more, it came up blank, but when I clicked at 'Compiled demos (36); suddenly the rotating "hourglass-replacement" appeared, and soon after the table. So we can chalk it up to crappy "modern" webdesign, overreliance on ajax combined with poor server response and/or network transients.