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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T02:33:56+00:00 2026-05-16T02:33:56+00:00

While reading one Freescale processor manual I stuck somewhere, which specifies that it is

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While reading one Freescale processor manual I stuck somewhere, which specifies that it is a 32-bit processor.

May I know the exact meaning and logic behind that?

Update:

Does it specify its ALU width or its address width or its register width specifically or all of them together is N-bit each.

Update:

Hope you have heard of Freescale processors. I just came across their site which describes one of their latest Starcore-based processor known as SC3850 as a 16-bit processor. As far as I know, it has 32 bit program counters, including ALU, and 40-bit register width and 2×64 bit address bus width. Also the SC3850 can handle SIMD(2) instructions which are of 32 bit or 64 bit.

For more details please go through this link

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T02:33:57+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 2:33 am

    One of the major reasons you would care about the register width of the processor is performance. Generally doubling the number of bits doubles the rate at which a processor can move data around, and compute. This is why we’re not all using 8 bit processors.

    The other major reason is address space. A 16 bit program counter limits you to 64k of address space, and a 32 bit counter limits you to 4 gigabytes. The new 64 bit processors make it possible, if all the address lines are present, to support 17,179,869,184 gigabytes of memory.

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