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The 8085 can address 216, or 65536 different memory locations.
The address bus in the 8085 is 16 bits wide.
The 8085 has a 16 bit address bus.
Yes, the 8085 microprocessor can access memory location A000, as it has a 16-bit address bus that allows it to address up to 64KB of memory, ranging from 0000 to FFFF in hexadecimal. The address A000 falls within this range, meaning the 8085 can read from or write to this memory location. However, the actual access depends on the system's memory configuration and whether that specific address is mapped to valid RAM or ROM.
The data size in the 8085 is 8 bits.
the 8085 microprocessor is a 8-bit microprocessor and these are bidirectional but the address lines are unidirectional.these address lines are used to address the location of the instruction in memory .these data lines are used to transfer data between processor and peripheral devices. when the address of the instruction will be recognized by the address lines the data will be send to the processor therefore the 16 address lines are not act as a data lines in 8085
The stack pointer is 16 bits in size on the 8085 because that is how Intel designed it. The address bus is also 16 bits, so it made sense for the program and stack to be located anywhere in that address space.
Yes and no. All memory location from 0H to 0FFFFH are addressable, but some of them are needed for the program, interrupt vectors, and the stack, so you would need to pay attention to where things are located in memory to design an appropriate program. In addition, if your system is using memory mapped I/O, some locations will be reserved.
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8085 has von neumann architecture it was derived after the name of mathematician john von neumann. its having 16 address bus and 8 bit data bus. it can access 2^16 individual memory location.
The 8085 is an 8-bit microprocessor. Even though there are some 16-bit registers (BC, DE, HL, SP, PC), with some 16-bit operations that can be performed on them, and a 16-bit address bus, the accumulator (A), the arithmetic logic unit (ALU), and the data bus are 8-bits in size, making the 8085 an 8-bit computer.