BigEd wrote:
A beginner project should not need RDY [...] which then keeps things simple.
I agree there's a challenge to be addressed regarding subjects like RDY, and part of it is to restrain the over-eagerness some novices possess.
The other part of the challenge is providing coherent information, because lack of same can (and I'm not exaggerating or being funny) be more of a problem than the problem itself! In a recently created thread I took a stab at organizing a collection of info, and if anyone has anything to add, please let me know or simply make a post in the thread:
RDY vs CLOCK STRETCHING. Includes 2 very simple circuitsJust tonight I made some changes myself.... including, you'll be glad to hear, Ed, a tempering comment for novices and a bypass strategy which, during troubleshooting, can rule out Clock Stretching as a point of failure.
Chromatix wrote:
However, WDC themselves say that if RDY is actively driven high, WAI simply won't halt the CPU as it's supposed to.
OK, thanks -- that makes sense. Even so, it's questionable whether any gate -- even an AC series device -- could successfully overcome RDY if the latter is as strong as other outputs on WDC devices. But we can at least be assured that tying WAI directly to VCC will prevent the CPU from halting, for whatever that may be worth. (Even though the CPU doesn't halt, I'm guessing RDY will keep futilely trying to pull low until an interrupt arrives.)
-- Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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