It's the addition of a single letter. That's nothing compared to having to swap between banks. Shawn Wilton Junior in CpE MicroBiologist Phone: (503) 881-2707 Email: shawn@black9.net http://black9.net Herbert Graf wrote: >>What do you mean by extended I/O space that you can't use I/O opcodes >>on? If I'm thinking of the same I/O space you are, it's because they >>managed to pack so much in to the chip, but they are limited by the size >>of the instruction word. So they can only access the first 64 >>locations, and the rest have to be accessed using the extended I/O >>operations. No biggy. >> >>Just means that instead of >>in r16 >>you have >>lds r16 > > > Exactly, which is to me just as annoying as banks on the PIC. > > >>If there's latency coming out of sleep, perhaps it's your oscillator? >>I've never had a problem with latency, especially since these chips are >>quite a bit faster than your standard pic (can't speak of the 18 series, >>though some are on order). > > > It's not a matter of it being a "problem", it is an annoyance, and one that > would seriously limit some of my uses (often when I use interrupts coming > out of sleep I need a very short latency to do things right). > > >>I'm surprised there's a chip out there that doesn't have an ADC. I >>thought every chip since 1998 had an ADC on it. ;-) > > > Agreed, I choose the chip because I THOUGHT it had an ADC (since the port > pins were labeled in a way that made me think that), only upon closer > inspection did I find out it has comparators. TTYL > > ---------------------------------- > Herbert's PIC Stuff: > http://repatch.dyndns.org:8383/pic_stuff/ > > -- > http://www.piclist.com hint: To leave the PICList > mailto:piclist-unsubscribe-request@mitvma.mit.edu -- http://www.piclist.com hint: To leave the PICList mailto:piclist-unsubscribe-request@mitvma.mit.edu