Difference between revisions of "Register"

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The first computers did not include many registers in the CPU, since each register needs separate [[hardware]], and that was a scarce resource early on. Many machines only had a single register available for doing computations with, the '''accumulator'''; these machines were typically a [[load-store architecture]].
 
The first computers did not include many registers in the CPU, since each register needs separate [[hardware]], and that was a scarce resource early on. Many machines only had a single register available for doing computations with, the '''accumulator'''; these machines were typically a [[load-store architecture]].
  
Later on, hardware was not so much of an issue, but computers still tend to have somewhat limited numbers of registers, because they are named by fields in [[instruction]]s, and [[bit]]s in the instruction [[word]] are (and always will be) a limited resource.
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Later on, hardware was not so much of an issue, but computers still tend to have somewhat limited numbers of programmer-visible registers, because they are named by fields in [[instruction]]s, and [[bit]]s in the instruction [[word]] are (and always will be) a limited resource. ([[Register renaming]] was developed to allow more registers to be used, without being able to explicitly name them.)
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Latest revision as of 13:10, 14 May 2021

A register is a special small memory unit; usually within a CPU, i.e. not part of the machine's main memory, although device controllers usually include registers too. For the ones which are part of the CPU, access to them is very fast - usually faster than main memory.

The first computers did not include many registers in the CPU, since each register needs separate hardware, and that was a scarce resource early on. Many machines only had a single register available for doing computations with, the accumulator; these machines were typically a load-store architecture.

Later on, hardware was not so much of an issue, but computers still tend to have somewhat limited numbers of programmer-visible registers, because they are named by fields in instructions, and bits in the instruction word are (and always will be) a limited resource. (Register renaming was developed to allow more registers to be used, without being able to explicitly name them.)

See also