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Memory Bank: Difference between revisions

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Tap that button and an editing window will open up where you can enter the data. See the picture. Each entry in the middle is one memory location and is located by the numbers across the top and left side, much like a BINGO card. The numbers across the top represent the low 4 bits of the address (going into the single dot) and the ones down the left are the high 4 bits (the double dots).[[File:Memory_Bank.png|thumb|400px|The Memory Bank is Editable.]]
Tap that button and an editing window will open up where you can enter the data. See the picture. Each entry in the middle is one memory location and is located by the numbers across the top and left side, much like a BINGO card. The numbers across the top represent the low 4 bits of the address (going into the single dot) and the ones down the left are the high 4 bits (the double dots).


If you are only using one address signal and it's the low one, the only locations that matter are the first row across. If however, you have to use ONLY the high 4 bit signal, then you can only access the first COLUMN down the left.
If you are only using one address signal and it's the low one, the only locations that matter are the first row across. If however, you have to use ONLY the high 4 bit signal, then you can only access the first COLUMN down the left.