From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "4-bit architecture"

m (Industry)
(4-bit microprocessor)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
* [[National IMP-4]]
 
* [[National IMP-4]]
 
* [[Fairchild PPS-25]]
 
* [[Fairchild PPS-25]]
* [[Rockwell PPS-4]]
+
* [[Rockwell PPS-4]]/1
 
* [[Rockwell PPS-4/2]]
 
* [[Rockwell PPS-4/2]]
 
* [[Toshiba T3472]]
 
* [[Toshiba T3472]]

Revision as of 13:59, 29 October 2015

Architecture word sizes
v · d · e

The 4-bit computer architecture is a microprocessor architecture that has a datapath width or a highest operand width of 4 bits or a nibble. These architectures typically have a matching register file with registers width of 4 bits.

Industry

Most of the first microprocessors during the early 1970s had 4-bit word length. Both the Intel4004 and the 4040 were 4-bits. The world's first single-chip microprocessor by Texas Instruments, the TMS1000, was also a 4-bit CPU. 4-bit word were proven to be very limiting and by 1974 there was a shift to larger architectures such as 8- and 12-bit architecture architectures.

Applications

Most 4-bit microprocessors were used almost exclusively in calculators and toys.

4-bit microprocessor

4-bit microcontrollers

4-bit discrete chips