The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems, Volume 1For courses teaching the 8051 Microcontoller. This book uses a step-by-step approach to teach the fundamentals of assembly language programming and interfacing of the 8051 microcontroller. It uses many examples to clarify concepts. Simple, concise examples are utilized to show what action each instruction performs, then a sample is provided to show its application. This text provides a comprehensive understanding of the internal organization of the 8051 registers and resources in a way that sheds the student's fear of assembly language. Whether students become designers of stand-alone systems or complex embedded systems, they will find this text a useful resource. |
From inside the book
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Page 16
... program counter . The function of the program counter is to point to the address of the next instruction to be executed . As each instruction is executed , the program counter is incremented to point to the address of the next ...
... program counter . The function of the program counter is to point to the address of the next instruction to be executed . As each instruction is executed , the program counter is incremented to point to the address of the next ...
Page 44
... PC ( program counter ) . The program counter points to the address of the next instruction to be executed . As the CPU fetches the opcode from the program ROM , the program counter is incre- mented to point to the next instruction . The ...
... PC ( program counter ) . The program counter points to the address of the next instruction to be executed . As the CPU fetches the opcode from the program ROM , the program counter is incre- mented to point to the next instruction . The ...
Page 46
... PC ( program counter ) has 0000 and starts to fetch the first opcode from location 0000 of the program ROM . In the case of the above program the first opcode is 7D , which is the code for moving an operand to R5 . Upon executing the ...
... PC ( program counter ) has 0000 and starts to fetch the first opcode from location 0000 of the program ROM . In the case of the above program the first opcode is 7D , which is the code for moving an operand to R5 . Upon executing the ...
Contents
CHAPTERS | 1 |
The 8051 Microcontrollers | 23 |
THE 8051 MICROCONTROLLERS 223 Section 1 1 Microcontrollers and Embedded Processors | 24 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems: Using Assembly and C Mazidi Muhammad Ali No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
ACALL ACALL DELAY addr addressing mode ASCII Assembly language baud rate binary bit addresses carry flag Chapter CJNE connected convert data pins decimal decoder discussed DJNZ DPTR EPROM Example execution external interrupt Figure flag bit frequency I/O ports instruction INT1 Intel interfacing interrupt vector table jump latch LCALL LJMP load logic loop machine cycle memory chip memory location microcontroller microprocessor MOV P1 MOV RO MOVX Notice NV-RAM on-chip ROM opcode operand output pointer program counter PSEN pull-up resistors pulse RAM location register bank reset Review Questions SBUF SECTION serial communication SETB TR1 Show signal SJMP Solution square wave stack stepper motor stop bit SUBB subroutine target address TCON timer Timer/counter TMOD transfer transistors True or false voltage Write a program