| A microprogramming teaching environment using the Macintosh computer |
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International Symposium on Microarchitecture
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Proceedings of the 22nd annual workshop on Microprogramming and microarchitecture
table of contents
Dublin, Ireland
Pages: 148 - 155
Year of Publication: 1989
ISBN:0-89791-324-8
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Author
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E. Sanchez
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Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Logic Systems Laboratory, 1015 Lausanne - Switzerland
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Downloads (6 Weeks): n/a, Downloads (12 Months): n/a, Citation Count: 1
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ABSTRACT
A microprogramming teaching environment is presented. It is composed of a hardware part (a 16 bit microprogrammable processor) and a software part, running on a Macintosh II computer.
The software includes 6 modules: two microassemblers - one uses a classical approach to generate microcode from a description in a register transfer language and the other one, which is more unusual, is menu-driven -; a disassembler; a monitor allowing one to display and modify the processor resources, as well as to control the execution; a memory loader and a simulator.
The interactive and convivial nature of the Macintosh computer, and especially the HyperCard application, are used thoroughly in order to facilitate a utilization of the system.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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T. C. Hartrum, G. B. Lamont, A. A. Ross, Am29203 Evaluation Board User's Guide, Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., Sunnyvale, 1986.
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