LISP implementations on small machines
Guy Sotomayor Jr
ggs at shiresoft.com
Thu Oct 3 13:04:24 CDT 2019
> On Oct 3, 2019, at 10:26 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
>
>
>> On Oct 3, 2019, at 12:39 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>>
>> On 10/3/19 9:01 AM, Noel Chiappa via cctalk wrote:
>>
>>> The PDP-6 and KA10 (basically a re-implementation of the PDP-6 architecture)
>>> both had cheapo versions where addresses 0-15 were in main memory, but also
>>> had an option for real registers, e.g. in the PDP-6: "The Type 162 Fast
>>> Memory Module contains 16 words with a 0.4 usecond cycle." The KA10 has
>>> a similar "fast memory option".
>>
>> A bit more contemporary example might be the low-end PIC
>> microcontrollers (e.g. the 12F series). Harvard architecture (14 bit
>> instructions, 8 bit data), but data is variously described as
>> "registers" (when used an instruction operand) or "memory" when
>> addressed indirectly. That is, the 64 bytes of SRAM can be referred to
>> as either a memory location or as a register operand.
>
> Then again, the PDP-10 has that "two ways to refer to it" as well. In that case, you do have dedicated register logic, and what happens is that memory addresses 0-15 are instead redirected to the register array. The same applies to the EL-X8. The way you can address things doesn't necessarily tell you what sort of storage mechanism is used for it.
>
So does the PDP-11. The 8 registers are mapped to the top 8 words of memory so you can do some quite interesting things. It is also possible to run a (small) program in only the registers (e.g. no memory at all).
TTFN - Guy
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