Reply by glen herrmannsfeldt●February 15, 20112011-02-15
Tim Wescott <tim@seemywebsite.com> wrote:
(snip)
> Have you tried extracting this from the data book? Like Glen said,
> usually a "pointer" would point to the base of an array, while an
> "index" would point to an offset from that base.
For S/360 and S/370, the base and index registers are equivalent,
though it might be that on some (early) systems the timing is
slightly different. (Zero in the instruction field means not to
do that operation.) Many programmers would use the index field,
where the base field should be used. (It saves typing one comma.)
In the "access register" mode, added I believe in XA, the distinction
does become important. (But AR mode is reasonably rare.)
Then there was the 6800 vs. 6502, where one uses 16 bit indexing off
an 8 bit origin, and the other 8 bit indexing off a 16 bit origin.
-- glen
Reply by Tim Wescott●February 15, 20112011-02-15
On 02/15/2011 11:08 AM, amgab2003 wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm begginer in dsp programming.
> I'm trying to develop a blackfin BF533 module, I want to understand the
> difference between the "Pointer Registers" (P0-P5) and the "Index Register"
> (I0-I3)
Have you tried extracting this from the data book? Like Glen said,
usually a "pointer" would point to the base of an array, while an
"index" would point to an offset from that base.
Whatever we may say, the data book is the final word; if you can figure
out what it's trying to tell you then go by that.
--
Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com
Do you need to implement control loops in software?
"Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you.
See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html
Reply by glen herrmannsfeldt●February 15, 20112011-02-15
> I'm trying to develop a blackfin BF533 module, I want to understand the
> difference between the "Pointer Registers" (P0-P5) and the "Index Register"
> (I0-I3)
Usually, and this is independent of the actual processor, index
registers are added to an address, such as to allow indexing through
an array. Sometimes there are size differences between index
registers and other registers that makes the distinction important,
other times there is no difference.
Oh, on some systems the index register is automatically scaled
by the size of the operand being addressed, convenient for array
indexing.
-- glen
Reply by amgab2003●February 15, 20112011-02-15
Hello,
I'm begginer in dsp programming.
I'm trying to develop a blackfin BF533 module, I want to understand the
difference between the "Pointer Registers" (P0-P5) and the "Index Register"
(I0-I3)
Thank you.