New Jersey Regimental Flags 1861
These national presentation colors were manufactured by the Evans & Hassall Company of Philadelphia for all the Union New Jersey regiments after 1863.
This design is very reminiscent of the Concentric Circle Design Flag of 1851 and became a popular method of arranging the increasing number of stars as the nation grew.
the willingness to sacrifice all for ones country{in this case their flag}
the flag was to show that a play was about to Begin
the black flag means muff
A flag flew over the theatre on play days to advertise performances. If a tragedy was scheduled, the flag was black; if a comedy was scheduled, the flag was white; if a history play was scheduled, the flag was red.
Crips wear their flag on the left.
if the result of an arithmetic operation, consists a carry then the carry flag is set
INR affect the carry flag.
there are 5 flags of intel 8085 are: Carry flag(CY), parity flag(P), Auxiliary Carry flag(AC), Zero Flag(Z), Sign flag(S).
Carry
Carry flag is the the bit 7 of the 8 bit PSW register, whenever there is an addition or subtraction process that has a carry on its 7th bit, the carry flag (C/CY) will be set to 1. OV is set to 1 when there is an arithmetic overflow. this applies to signed and unsigned operations.
If you add 94H to C5H with the ADI instruction, the result in the accumulator will be 59H and the carry flag will be set. It does not matter what value the carry flag had to start with, because you said ADI, instead of ACI. (For ACI, the result would be 5AH with carry set.)
The 8085 microprocessor has 5 flags: 1. Zero flag: The zero flag is set, when the ALU operation results a zero . 2. Carry flag: If an arithmetic operations results in a carry, this flag is set. 3. Parity flag: This flag is set, when an arithmetic or logical operation results in a data, which has even number of 1s. If otherwise, it is reset. 4. Sign flag: After the execution of an arithmetic or logic operations, if D7 bit of the accumulator is 1, it indicates a negative number and this flag is set. If otherwise, it is reset. 5. Auxiliary Carry flag: used for BCD Operations, During the BCD operations, if D3 bit producing the carry then the AC bit set as1, otherwise the bit is 0. 6. Carry Flag: when a carry is generated by digit D7, then the carry flag set as 1, otherwise the bit will be 0.
We have only one flag register of 8 bits. Bits description is as follows (Assuming D0=LSB & D7=MSB) D7=Sign Bit. D6= Zero Flag D4= Auxiliary Carry Flag D2 = Parity Flag D0= Carry Flag.
Jump on Carry is simply a "JUMP" instruction which will transfer the control to some specific location if carry flag is set. For Example: JC 2004H This instruction will take the control to address location 2004H if carry flag is set.
JNC is Jump No-Carry, so the carry flag is checked. JNZ is Jump No-Zero, so the zero flag is checked.
To move the carry flag to a register in assembly language, you typically use the ADC (Add with Carry) or SBB (Subtract with Borrow) instruction, depending on the operation context. Alternatively, you can use the CLO (Clear Carry) and STC (Set Carry) instructions to manipulate the carry flag directly. In some architectures, you may also use a specific instruction that directly transfers the carry flag to a designated register, if available. Always refer to the specific instruction set architecture documentation for precise syntax and capabilities.
A flag bearer was in jeopardy of losing his life.