1/26/2018 4:08 AM | |
Joined: 3/16/2015 Last visit: 10/10/2021 Posts: 1250 Rating: (173) |
Thanks everyone. So basically anything marked M addresses Bit Memory to the maximum reserved size of for the specific CPU. Anyone knows if the attached specs still apply to current versions of those CPUs? Edit: In the datasheet it is referred to as "flag" ad it is 8Kbytes Thanks Kal |
Last edited by: Kal.A at: 1/26/2018 4:12:20 AMLast edited by: Kal.A at: 1/26/2018 4:29:35 AMLast edited by: Jen_Moderator at: 1/26/2018 10:01:30 AMInserted right link. |
|
1/26/2018 5:30 PM | |
Joined: 7/7/2010 Last visit: 9/20/2024 Posts: 15213 Rating: (2417)
|
I think the original German Marker translates to Flag in English, and essentially means Boolean values used to denote a condition. In PC programming, flags are used to denote conditions which can then be used for comparisons and decision trees (IF/THEN, SELECT, WHILE, FOR and so on).
|
science guy |
|
1/26/2018 6:24 PM | |
Posts: 2826 Rating: (685) |
Hello,
The reference still applies for the flag (M) memory on newer CPUs. The other memory numbers do not apply. The catalog data in the software states all information, except the count of flags available (%MB0 - %MB8191). That complete specification is in the System Manual.. but only specify the CPU version that was current at the time of publishing. A way to test what the biggest available memory byte is, is define a tag and compile the program. Are there any rhyme and reason for your inquiries? BR |
Follow us on