View Full Version : What is the GENERAL PURPOSE REGISTER
Niggy G
November 24th, 2002, 16:44
I can't find a clear definition on the net, anyone like to enlighten me.
And yes it is coursework ;)
This is all i have so far...
The General Purpose Register stores data that is needed for immediate processing.
AlphaWolf
November 24th, 2002, 19:16
I'm no guru and I have no college degree, so anybody else correct me if I'm wrong, but iirc thats where the processor stores whatever information it is currently processing. I guess you can call it the "fastest" memory in your computer. When you see a "32-bit" or "64-bit", etc, processor, that refers to how large this specific memory segment is. The larger it is, the more information the processor can crunch per clock cycle.
Slougi
November 24th, 2002, 23:04
Originally posted by AlphaWolf
I'm no guru and I have no college degree, so anybody else correct me if I'm wrong, but iirc thats where the processor stores whatever information it is currently processing. I guess you can call it the "fastest" memory in your computer. When you see a "32-bit" or "64-bit", etc, processor, that refers to how large this specific memory segment is. The larger it is, the more information the processor can crunch per clock cycle.
I believe that is correct. Try asking the question on the beyond3d forums (http://www.beyond3d.com/forums/index.php), there are some very knowledgeable people there. You could also look around in AMD and Intel documentation.
Niggy G
November 25th, 2002, 13:20
Thanks, thats sort of helped :sleepy: ???
AlphaWolf
November 25th, 2002, 14:50
/me shrugs
I am a criminal law major, I am not taking any computer courses :P
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