Text Conventions; Table 1. Text Conventions - Intel Atom N270 User Manual

Table of Contents

Advertisement

1.2

Text Conventions

The notations listed in

Table 1. Text Conventions

Notation
#
Variables
Instructions
Numbers
Units of Measure
A
GB
KB
mA
MB
MHz
ms
mW
ns
pF
W
V
µA
µF
µs
µW
Signal Names
Table 1
may be used throughout this manual.
The pound symbol (#) appended to a signal name indicates that the signal
is active low. (e.g., PM_BMBUSY#)
Variables are shown in italics. Variables must be replaced with correct
values.
Instruction mnemonics are shown in uppercase. When you are
programming, instructions are not case-sensitive. You may use either
uppercase or lowercase.
Hexadecimal numbers are represented by a string of hexadecimal digits
followed by the character H. A zero prefix is added to numbers that begin
with A through F. (For example, FF is shown as 0FFH.) Decimal and binary
numbers are represented by their customary notations. (That is, 255 is a
decimal number and 1111 is a binary number. In some cases, the letter B
is added for clarity.)
The following abbreviations are used to represent units of measure:
amps, amperes
gigabytes
kilobytes
kilo-ohms
milliamps, milliamperes
megabytes
megahertz
milliseconds
milliwatts
nanoseconds
picofarads
watts
volts
microamps, microamperes
microfarads
microseconds
microwatts
Signal names are shown in uppercase. When several signals share a
common name, an individual signal is represented by the signal name
followed by a number, while the group is represented by the signal name
followed by a variable (n). For example, the lower chip-select signals are
named CS0#, CS1#, CS2#, and so on; they are collectively called CSn#.
A pound symbol (#) appended to a signal name identifies an active-low
signal. Port pins are represented by the port abbreviation, a period, and
the pin number (e.g., P1.0).
Definition
Developer's Kit User Manual

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

945gse

Table of Contents