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Apr 21, 2023 at 1:38 comment added Peter Cordes therefore it has me asking: "what type of machine" - The specific machine (CPU) you're talking about, of course. A "word" isn't a standard size across all architectures, so it only makes sense in the context of a specific target. Or in a higher-level language like C, a size that is hopefully appropriate for the target, e.g. unsigned long int or maybe uintptr_t. (But different choices by different implementations mean there isn't any standard type you can use that's reliably the max width of an integer register or a load/store.)
Apr 20, 2023 at 18:34 comment added Joooeey Memory can also refer to disk and tape, although the narrower interpretation is often used.
Apr 20, 2023 at 16:11 comment added Peter Cordes [data-word] seems pretty terrible. It's not idiomatic and sounds awkward. Moreover, on word-oriented machines like MIPS, instructions are usually a machine word as well. I thought "machine word" was standard terminology; I've used it plenty of times to mean en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_(computer_architecture). (Not that I recommend [word-computer-architecture], though: it's too long, and risks confusion as being about ISAs that have word-addressable memory. Not that "word architecture" is a standard term.)
Apr 18, 2023 at 4:06 history answered M. Justin CC BY-SA 4.0