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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.
Of course! People were doing real arithmetic long before the first computer!
No
ALU
Processor - Aka Chip or Microprocessor
The "arithmetic logic unit" performs these operations in classical standard microprocessor architectures
It contains a 32 bit CPU, a floating-point math coprocessor, unified instruction and data cache memory and memory management unit in a single IC.
What is the standard IRQ setting for a math coprocessor?
8086 main application is to evaluate the arithmetic operations in any systems that uses 8086
Arithmetic Logic Unit.It's a section in a microprocessor that handles (among other things) arithmetic operations such as addition and subtraction.
The central processing unit (CPU) IS the brain of the computer.