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Microbit

A Rust crate for BBC micro:bit development

Install / Use

/learn @nrf-rs/Microbit
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

microbit

microbit contains everything required getting started using Rust to create firmwares for the fabulous BBC micro:bit microcontroller board. This little board has everything and a kitchen sink built-in, even a capable debugging interface.

Getting started

All you need to start programming this device is:

  • A BBC micro:bit board
  • A computer (known to work with macOS, Linux and Windows)
  • A bit of open source software

Know your version

The micro:bit comes in different versions. There is a separate crate for each major board version. See the table below to identify which crate you need to use.

| Crate | Board version | Board image | Docs | crates.io | target | | ------------------------------ | ------------- | ----------- | ---- | --------- | ------ | | microbit | V1 | <img src="https://github.com/microbit-foundation/microbit-svg/raw/master/microbit-drawing-back-1-5.png" width="124px" height="100px"> | docs.rs | crates.io | thumbv6m-none-eabi | | microbit-v2 | V2 | <img src="https://github.com/microbit-foundation/microbit-svg/raw/master/microbit-drawing-back-2.png" width="124px" height="100px"> | docs.rs | crates.io | thumbv7em-none-eabihf |

Install dependencies

The examples make use of some of the fantastic tooling from the knurling and probe-rs projects. In order to run the examples you need to install probe-rs and flip-link.

> cargo install probe-rs-tools flip-link

Run an example

The first thing to try is one of the examples in this repository. Plug in your micro:bit and run one of the commands below.

For micro:bit V1

> cargo run --release --manifest-path ./examples/display-blocking/Cargo.toml --features v1 --target thumbv6m-none-eabi

For micro:bit V2

> cargo run --release --manifest-path ./examples/display-blocking/Cargo.toml --features v2 --target thumbv7em-none-eabihf

You should see a lot of build output, the orange LED on the back of the micro:bit should flash quickly, and a message should appear on the LED display.

Congratulations! You've flashed your first Rust program onto your micro:bit!

Further reading

A guide to embedded development with Rust on the micro:bit using this crate can be found in the MicroRust book.

Other useful resources:

License

0-clause BSD license.

Related Skills

View on GitHub
GitHub Stars331
CategoryDevelopment
Updated8d ago
Forks68

Languages

Rust

Security Score

95/100

Audited on Mar 24, 2026

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