S3C80A5B
ADDRESSING MODES
3-7
INDEXED ADDRESSING MODE (X)
Indexed (X) addressing mode adds an offset value to a base address during instruction execution in order to calculate
the effective operand address (see Figure 3-7). You can use Indexed addressing mode to access locations in the
internal register file or in external memory (if implemented). You cannot, however, access locations C0H–FFH in
set 1 using Indexed addressing.
In short offset Indexed addressing mode, the 8-bit displacement is treated as a signed integer in the range –128 to
+127. This applies to external memory accesses only (see Figure 3-8).
For register file addressing, an 8-bit base address provided by the instruction is added to an 8-bit offset contained in
a working register. For external memory accesses, the base address is stored in the working register pair
designated in the instruction. The 8-bit or 16-bit offset given in the instruction is then added to the base address (see
Figure 3-9).
The only instruction that supports Indexed addressing mode for the internal register file is the Load instruction (LD).
The LDC and LDE instructions support Indexed addressing mode for internal program memory and for external data
memory (if implemented).
dst/src
OPCODE
Two-Operand
Instruction
Example
Point to One of the
Working Register
(1 of 8)
Sample Instruction:
LD R0, #BASE[R1]
; Where BASE is an 8-bit immediate value
Program Memory
Register File
x
3 LSBs
Value used in
Instruction
OPERAND
INDEX
Base Address
RP0 or RP1
Selected RP
Points to
Start of
Working
Register
Block
~
~
~
~
+
MSB Points to
RP0 or RP1
Figure 3-7. Indexed Addressing to Register File