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Page Title: TOPIC 7—COMPUTER DATA TYPES AND FORMATS
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TIMING CIRCUIT FUNCTIONS
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Electronics Technician Volume 06-Digital Data Systems
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TOPIC 8—POWER SUPPLIES

frequency stability. Figure 4-41 is an example of a timing circuit (block and timing diagram) using an oscillator and flip-flop combination. Notice how with the use of a ring counter (flip-flops),  we  can  generate additional phases  that can be used for more complex functions involving multiple operations. CAUTION REMEMBER,   COMPUTER   CIR- CUITS CONTAIN ESDS DEVICES. ONLY PERSONNEL WITH ESDS TRAINING SHOULD HANDLE ESDS DEVICES! TOPIC 7—COMPUTER DATA TYPES AND FORMATS Different types  or kinds of data can be processed  by a computer. The types are as follows: l Bit —The smallest data element  or operand  is the bit.  Individual  bits   are  used  primarily  in  status indicating and flag registers. The two possible states (0 or 1) indicate either ON/OFF, TRUE/FALSE, or other two-state conditions. Depending  on the type of computer, single bits  in a memory   word   can   be   addressable   by   a   single instruction. Larger computers and some of the newer microcomputers have this capability. Most mainframe computers and some newer microprocessors have machine instructions that allow for single-bit operations (set, clear, or test). If a processor cannot address a single bit,  there  are  software  algorithms  (small  programs)  that can combine a number of microinstruction to perform single  bit  operations. . Nibble  —The  next  larger  data  element  or operand is the nibble. A nibble is a 4-bit grouping or half-byte  of data. Nibbles are used  to store a single binary coded decimal (BCD) digit. . Byte —Probably the most commonly  accessed data  element   is the   8-bit   byte.   Microcomputer memories can use a single byte, two bytes, or more. Bytes  form  the  basis  for  operand  operations.  In addition, each 8-bit byte can store a single alphanumeric character in American National Standard Code for Information  Interchange  (ASCII)  format  or  another coding  system. It can also hold a binary number equivalent to 25510. l Word —For computers with 16-bit or larger computer  words,  there are two more data elements. The Figure  4-41.—Example  of  an  oscillator  and  flip-flop  combination:  A.  Block  diagram;  B.  Timing  diagram. 4-24

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