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What is a co-processor chip?

Updated: 10/4/2023
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Kooikeria

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12y ago

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A co-processor is a special chip which is used for some special operations like mathematical calculations, graphics and etc in order to reduce the load of the main processor or micro processor.

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12y ago

Co-processor chip is an integrated circuit that helps the CPU to process specific tasks, such as the maths co-processor that helps with mathematical computations.

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Q: What is a co-processor chip?
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Which processor first integrated the math coprocessor in the CPU chip?

your mom!intel1883


Is there microprocessor with the name 80487?

No. An 80487 would have been a math coprocessor for an 80486 general-purpose microprocessor...just like the 8087 was the math coprocessor for the 8086 and 8088, the 80287 for the 80286, and the 80387 was for the 80386. The 80486 was the first Intel processor to contain an on-chip math coprocessor, so there wouldn't have been an 80487 because it wasn't necessary.


What is the standard IRQ setting for a math coprocessor?

What is the standard IRQ setting for a math coprocessor?


How can you find out what coprocessor you have?

Modern computers typically do not use a coprocessor. Floating-point capabilities are built into the CPU.


What is the arithmetic -coprocessor?

sala kuta i am not know,


What does Intel 486 mean?

The Intel 80486 was a microprocessor family produced by Intel introduced in 1989. It was their first 86 processor with a math coprocessor built into it. It's predecessor family were the 386 family and it's sucessor was the Pentium chip


What is the first CPU to include an internal math coprocessor?

486SX


How does the 8087 coprocessor work?

the 8087 is a numeric data processor(NDP) it is basically made to work with 8086/8088 processors.it cannot fetch its instruction by own so its buses(address and data buses)are simply connected to the respective buses of the processor.its instruction are recognized by the word F because each and every instruction of this coprocessor starts with the word F.this is how the min processor distinguishes between its own and the coprocessor instructions.(eg):-FADD,FSUB,etc.this coprocessor has 8-registers eacch capable of storing 80-bit temporary real numbers. the BUSY pin of the coprocessor is connected to the main processor's TEST pin.this TEST pin is active low in nature.this is because the speed of operation of the coprocessor and the main processor is different. the need of this coprocessor is because the calculation speed of maths operations containing floating real numbers is very fast than the processors like 8086/8088.during the execution of the program if the processor encounters the instruction starting with F word(11011)then it simply gives control to the 8087.initially the coprocessor is initialized by loading it with the control word which gives the idea to the 8087 that which exceptions are to be ignored.usually after the calculations the status word of the coprocessor is loaded to see which errors hve occurred.


How many processors does the 80486 CPU have?

It was only when Intel developed the Core Duo that they had more than one core or processor per chip IMPROVED: The 486 CPU was the first CPU Intel made which utilized a single processor chip for all functions. Before it, processors such as the 286 and 386 utilized two processors (an ALU and a math coprocessor) to perform tasks, as they could not fit both functions onto one. Now, all processors have a built-in ALU and math-coprocessor. As of the Intel Core Duo they contained two separate cores in a single processor. It is still, however, a single processor! It just has two cores and thus can function as two separate CPUs. This trend continued in the Core 2 Duo line.


Difference between coprocessors and main processor?

A coprocessor provides auxiliary functions or features that the main processor does not have. These might include floating point support or hardware encryption. A coprocessor is generally not usable without its main processor, whereas a processor may function in a crippled or less powerful form without a coprocessor. An example of a processor and a coprocessor pair would be the 80386 and the 80387.


What are the differences between the Intel 80386 and the Intel 80486?

* Data/Instruction Cache - An 8192-byte SRAM built into the processor core, designed to store the most commonly used instructions. The 386 supported an off-chip cache, but this was much slower. * Pipelining - This allows the processor to handle a Locate-Fetch-Execute each clock cycle. The pipeline is offset meaning the execute step required information from the previous two clock cycles. A locate would feed the next fetch, the fetch would feed the next execute. The 386 needs to do each step separately. * Improvements to MMU performance. * Integrated FPU - (DX models only) Added accelerated high end math functions.


Can real number arithmetic be done without the use of a coprocessor?

Of course! People were doing real arithmetic long before the first computer!