It is used in electronic devices
+5v supply is alone needed for Intel 8085 Microprocessor
8085 is a microprocessor designed by Intel
The 8085 was replaced with the 8086/8088. As such, there is no 16 bit version of the 8085.
The 8085 has a single +5V power supplyThe 8085 has a multiplexed low order address busThe 8085 has extra single pin interrupts, TRAP, RST7.5, RST6.5, and RST5.5The 8085 has serial I/O pins SID and SODThe 8085 has maskable interrupts and the RIM/SIM instructionThe 8085 includes the functionality of the 8224 clock genereator and 8228 system controllerThe 8085 added several 16 bit operations
Writing a hex program for the 8051 microcontroller on an 8085 microprocessor is not directly feasible, as they are based on different architectures and instruction sets. The 8051 uses its own assembly language and has features like built-in I/O ports and timers that are not present in the 8085. However, you can create a similar program in 8085 assembly language that performs equivalent tasks, keeping in mind the differences in hardware capabilities and instruction sets. You would need to carefully translate the logic and functionality from the 8051 program to suit the 8085 environment.
The 8085 was introduced by Intel in 1977.
The 8085 is not pipelined.
The '8085' in the 8085 microprocessor is the designation given to the microprocessor by Intel. The '5' means it is a single power supply (5 volt) version of the 8080, with enhancements.
There are 74 instructions in the 8085 microprocessor.
Yes because 8085/77 = 105
8085 is the developed version of 8080. due to the usage of +5v the 8085 was given to the developed version of 8080.
The OUT instruction on the 8085 uses 10 T cycles, 3 for opcode fetch, 1 for opcode decode, 3 for port address fetch, and 3 for port data store. Any wait states encountered are above and beyond that.