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Computer Architecture with Python and ARM

You're reading from   Computer Architecture with Python and ARM Learn how computers work, program your own, and explore assembly language on Raspberry Pi

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837636679
Length 412 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alan Clements Alan Clements
Author Profile Icon Alan Clements
Alan Clements
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Using Python to Simulate a Computer
2. Chapter 1: From Finite State Machines to Computers FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: High-Speed Introduction to Python 4. Chapter 3: Data Flow in a Computer 5. Chapter 4: Crafting an Interpreter – First Steps 6. Chapter 5: A Little More Python 7. Chapter 6: TC1 Assembler and Simulator Design 8. Chapter 7: Extending the TC1 9. Chapter 8: Simulators for Other Architectures 10. Part 2: Using Raspberry Pi to Study a Real Computer Architecture
11. Chapter 9: Raspberry Pi: An Introduction 12. Chapter 10: A Closer Look at the ARM 13. Chapter 11: ARM Addressing Modes 14. Chapter 12: Subroutines and the Stack 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendices – Summary of Key Concepts

Summary

Addressing modes comprise all the ways to express the location of an item in memory. Addressing modes are simultaneously the easiest and most difficult topic in assembly language programming. The concept is simple, but indirect addressing modes that use pointers may take some effort to visualize.

In this chapter, we learned about literal or immediate addressing where an operand is an actual value (it’s the thing itself and not the location). Literal values are used to specify constants – for example, in x + 5, the number 5 is a literal. This is the simplest of addressing modes, and no memory location is accessed because the data is part of the instruction.

We also looked at the ARM’s rather unusual way of specifying literals, by providing a value in the range of 0 to 255 and a multiplier that can multiply it by an even power of 2. You can specify 5 and store 5, 20, 80, and so on.

Much of this chapter was taken up by register indirect addressing...

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