5 bit, byte, word and string addressing – Texas Instruments MSP50C614 User Manual

Page 136

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Bit, Byte, Word and String Addressing

4-44

Table 4–38. Class 9c Instruction Description

C9c

Mnemonic

Description

0

MOV AP

n, imm6

Load the accumulator pointer (AP) with a five bit constant.

1

ADD AP

n, imm5

Add a five bit constant

imm5 to the referenced accumulator pointer(AP).

Table 4–39. Class 9d Instruction Description

C9d

Mnemonic

Description

0 0 0 0 BEGLOOP

Marks the beginning of loop. Queue interrupts and pushes the next PC value onto a
temporary stack location.

0 0 0 1 ENDLOOP

n If R4 is not negative, pops the temporary stack value back on the PC and decrements

R4 by

n. If R4 is negative, the instruction is a NOP and execution will exit the loop. n is

either 1 or 2

0 0 1 0 IDLE

Stops processor clocks. Device enters low power mode waiting on an interrupt to
restart the clocks and execution.

1 0 0 0 INTE

Sets IM bit in status register to a 1, thus enabling interrupts.

1 0 0 1 INTD

Sets IM bit in status register to a 0, thus disabling interrupts.

1 0 1 0 SXM

Sets XM in status register to 1 enabling sign extension mode.

1 0 1 1 RXM

Sets XM in status register to 0, disabling sign extension mode.

1 1 0 0 SFM

Sets FM in status register to 1, enabling multiplier shift mode for signed fractional
arithmetic.

1 1 0 1 RFM

Sets FM in status register to 0, enabling multiplier shift mode for unsigned fractional
or integer arithmetic.

1 1 1 0 SOVM

Set OM bit in status register to 1, enabling ALU saturation output (DSP mode).

1 1 1 1 ROVM

Set OM bit in status register to 0, disabling the saturating ALU operation (normal
mode).

4.5

Bit, Byte, Word and String Addressing

The MSP50P614/MSP50C614 has instructions which address bits, bytes,
words and strings in data memory or program memory. Data memory is always
accessed in bytes by the hardware, but is based on the instruction. The data
memory location is treated as a byte, word, or flag address. There are five
different kinds of addresses: byte addresses, byte-string addresses, word
addresses, word-string addresses, and flag addresses. Each type of address
is described below. Refer to Figure 4–3 and Table 4–40 for reference.

Byte and byte string address: Byte addressing is used to access individual
bytes with an instruction in byte mode. Such instructions have a suffix, B, at
the end of instruction name (for example, ADDB, MOVB, etc.). A byte string

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