The DAA instruction in the 8085 only accesses internal registers, so it has no addressing mode. At best, it can be considered an implicit mode instruction.
Bhau is the word, pronounced bhaa-oo. If addressing an older brother, you would say "Dada" (daa-daa with soft d's).
The DAA (Decimal Adjust Accumulator) instruction in the 8085 conditionally adds 06H to A in order to normalize the low order nibble to a BCD value betwen 0H and 9H. It then conditionally adds 60H to A in order to similarly normalize the high order nibble. This is done as part of supporting multi-precision decimal arithmetic.
The IAO is not the DAA, but is responsible to the DAA.
78 on youtube, but it is the actual number
in your heart :D
Inyasha, Daa Daa Daa, Yumerio Patissiere, Kodocha and lots more
They first kiss in episode 45
loop: mvi c,59 dcr c mov a,c daa movc,a jnz loop end
Daa! Daa! Daa! or UFO Baby! ---it doesn't center around diapers, actually.
DAA (Decimal Adjust for Addition) is used following a normal ADD, when it is known that the input data represented BCD (Binary Coded Decimal). It compensates for the half byte carry that might occur because the BCD format is not the same as the binary format.
I only know that it has around 47 chapters. On the website I found the information, I couldn't find the volume count, but maybe I overlooked it. Here's the source: http://www.mangareader.net/1577/daa-daa-daa.html
No - the User Representative cannot also be the DAA.