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Sep 2, 2023 at 18:47 comment added Peter Cordes (But if you're talking about a "word-at-a-time" implementation of strlen or something, you would normally mean a full register of data. That's why the term "word" is only useful when you don't need to be specific, or can rely on your audience to know what you mean, or are using it as a technical term with a specific meaning in the context of one ISA, such as x86 where it's 16-bit, MIPS where it's 32-bit, etc..) Anyway, the tag has now been renamed to [cpu-word], which is a good choice.
Sep 2, 2023 at 18:47 comment added Peter Cordes @AndreasismovingtoCodidact: The tag about the increasingly-nebulous term "word" needs to include the word "word". It's not always the same thing as register width. e.g. MIPS64 still uses "word" to mean 32-bit chunks, and instructions that operate on full registers are double-word operations like dadd $t0, $t1, $t2.
Apr 20, 2023 at 23:38 comment added Andreas condemns Israel register-size actually doesn't seem so bad.
Apr 19, 2023 at 19:18 comment added cafce25 I fear absolutely no one will know what that's supposed to mean or find it. Is it the number of registers on the cpu? Number of registers that can be addressed by an instruction?
Apr 19, 2023 at 18:44 history answered jcoppens CC BY-SA 4.0