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The 8085 was given its number as the next version of the 8080. The 5 means that it operates on a single 5 volt power source.
it is the standard usded by the INTEL to categorize their microprocessors.
RST is simply the opcode chosen to represent the Restart instruction.
sample program in sum of the series using the formula for s=n/2[2a+{n-1}d] in 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
Intel named the 8085 after the 8080. The 5 means it runs on a single +5V power supply, as opposed to the 8080 which needed +5V, -5V, and +12V. The predecessors of the 8085 were the 8080, 8008, 4040, and 4004. Intel named the 8086/8088 after the 8085. It was considered the logical continuation of the 8085 family, but as a true 16-bit processor. The 8086 is a 16-bit computer running on a 16-bit bus. The 8088 is the same 16-bit computer, but it runs on an 8-bit bus, and it was the heart of the first IBM PC.
8085 is a microprocessor designed by Intel
bcoz its operate on 5v only.it is a 8 bit micro processor.800 is series 5 is the voltage
No. The 8086 has instructions not present in the 8085. The 8086 was marketed as "source compatible" with the 8085, meaning that there was a translator program which could convert assembly language code for the 8085 into assembly language code for the 8086. However, this does not mean that the compiled 8086 assembly code would then run on an 8085; among other things, the 8086 was a true 16-bit processor, as opposed to the 8085 which was an 8-bit processor that supported a few 16-bit operations.
The 8085 was replaced with the 8086/8088. As such, there is no 16 bit version of the 8085.
The 8085 is not pipelined.
The 8085 was introduced by Intel in 1977.