Kage Kaisen
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Kage Kaisen Revival!

January 19th 2010, 6:45 pm by Kensei

.SITE RENOVATION.

To all our members,

I (Kensei), have decided to renovate the site, which has remained dead since our head Administrator, Baraku, went absent. There will be a new set of rules, a new skin, new profile formats...

Basically, we're starting the site over.

But don't be alarmed. For those of you who choose to return, you will not have to rewrite your application, or change it to the present system. Your applications are still there, resting in the Filing Cabinet -- feel free and ask the Staff to repost it if it has already been approved, or ask them to read over the application and approve it, then move it to the Approved sub-boards.

If you do not wish to roleplay on the site any longer, or the renovation does not appeal to you, all you have to do is tell the Staff in a PM ; your account will be removed without any questions.

We apologize for any inconveniences, and thank you all for your patience and cooperation.


Your loving (new) head Admin,
Kensei


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Post by taixyz1992 November 27th 2010, 11:49 am

An index register[NB 1] in a computer's CPU is a processor register used for modifying operand addresses during the run of a program, typically for doing vector/array operations. Index registers were first used in the British Manchester Mark 1 computer, in 1949.

Index registers are used for a special kind of indirect addressing where an immediate constant (i.e. which is part of the instruction itself) is added to the contents of a register to form the address to the actual operand or data; architectures which allow more than one register to be used this way naturally have an opcode field for specifying which register to use.

In early computers without any form of indirect addressing, array operations had to be performed either by linearly repeating program code for each array element (i.e. over all address locations), or by using rather "dirty" self-modifying code techniques – both alternatives leading to quite significant disadvantages in program flexibility and maintenance, as well as being wasteful of computer memory; the latter a very scarce resource in computer installations of the early era (as well as in early microcomputers several decades later).

In general, index registers became a standard part of computers during the technology's second generation (roughly 1955–1964). See, for example, the IBM 700/7000 mainframes. Early "small machines" with index registers include the AN/USQ-17, around 1960, and the real-time computers from Scientific Data Systems. The first microprocessor with an index register appears to have been the Motorola 6800, whose upgraded clone MOS Technology 6502 made good use of two such registers.


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