PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL Microchip Technology, PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL Datasheet - Page 89

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PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL

Manufacturer Part Number
PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL
Description
MCU PIC 64K FLASH XLP 80TQFP
Manufacturer
Microchip Technology
Series
PIC® XLP™ 18Fr

Specifications of PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL

Core Size
8-Bit
Program Memory Size
64KB (32K x 16)
Core Processor
PIC
Speed
64MHz
Connectivity
EBI/EMI, I²C, LIN, SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, LVD, POR, PWM, WDT
Number Of I /o
69
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Eeprom Size
1K x 8
Ram Size
4K x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
1.8 V ~ 5.5 V
Data Converters
A/D 24x12b
Oscillator Type
Internal
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 85°C
Package / Case
80-TFQFP
Controller Family/series
PIC18
Eeprom Memory Size
1024Byte
Ram Memory Size
3862Byte
Cpu Speed
16MIPS
No. Of Timers
11
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
PIC18F86K22-I/PTRSL
Manufacturer:
Microchip Technology
Quantity:
10 000
6.1.3.4
Device Resets on stack overflow and stack underflow
conditions are enabled by setting the STVREN bit
(CONFIG4L<0>). When STVREN is set, a full or under-
flow condition will set the appropriate STKFUL or
STKUNF bit and then cause a device Reset. When
STVREN is cleared, a full or underflow condition will set
the appropriate STKFUL or STKUNF bit, but not cause
a device Reset. The STKFUL or STKUNF bits are
cleared by the user software or a Power-on Reset.
6.1.4
A Fast Register Stack is provided for the STATUS,
WREG and BSR registers to provide a “fast return”
option for interrupts. This stack is only one level deep
and is neither readable nor writable. It is loaded with the
current value of the corresponding register when the
processor vectors for an interrupt. All interrupt sources
will push values into the Stack registers. The values in
the registers are then loaded back into the working
registers if the RETFIE, FAST instruction is used to
return from the interrupt.
If both low and high-priority interrupts are enabled, the
Stack registers cannot be used reliably to return from
low-priority interrupts. If a high-priority interrupt occurs
while servicing a low-priority interrupt, the Stack
register values stored by the low-priority interrupt will
be overwritten. In these cases, users must save the key
registers in software during a low-priority interrupt.
If interrupt priority is not used, all interrupts may use the
Fast Register Stack for returns from interrupt. If no
interrupts are used, the Fast Register Stack can be
used to restore the STATUS, WREG and BSR registers
at the end of a subroutine call. To use the Fast Register
Stack for a subroutine call, a CALL label, FAST
instruction must be executed to save the STATUS,
WREG and BSR registers to the Fast Register Stack. A
RETURN, FAST instruction is then executed to restore
these registers from the Fast Register Stack.
Example 6-1 shows a source code example that uses
the Fast Register Stack during a subroutine call and
return.
EXAMPLE 6-1:
 2010 Microchip Technology Inc.
CALL SUB1, FAST
SUB1
RETURN FAST
FAST REGISTER STACK
Stack Full and Underflow Resets
FAST REGISTER STACK
CODE EXAMPLE
;STATUS, WREG, BSR
;SAVED IN FAST REGISTER
;STACK
;RESTORE VALUES SAVED
;IN FAST REGISTER STACK
Preliminary
PIC18F87K22 FAMILY
6.1.5
There may be programming situations that require the
creation of data structures, or look-up tables, in
program memory. For PIC18 devices, look-up tables
can be implemented in two ways:
• Computed GOTO
• Table Reads
6.1.5.1
A computed GOTO is accomplished by adding an offset
to the program counter. An example is shown in
Example 6-2.
A look-up table can be formed with an ADDWF PCL
instruction and a group of RETLW nn instructions. The
W register is loaded with an offset into the table before
executing a call to that table. The first instruction of the
called routine is the ADDWF PCL instruction. The next
instruction executed will be one of the RETLW
instructions that returns the value ‘nn’ to the calling
function.
The offset value (in WREG) specifies the number of
bytes that the program counter should advance and
should be multiples of two (LSb = 0).
In this method, only one data byte may be stored in
each instruction location and room on the return
address stack is required.
EXAMPLE 6-2:
6.1.5.2
A better method of storing data in program memory
allows two bytes of data to be stored in each instruction
location.
Look-up table data may be stored two bytes per
program word while programming. The Table Pointer
(TBLPTR) specifies the byte address and the Table
Latch (TABLAT) contains the data that is read from the
program memory. Data is transferred from program
memory one byte at a time.
The table read operation is discussed further in
Section 7.1 “Table Reads and Table Writes”.
ORG
TABLE
MOVF
CALL
nn00h
ADDWF
RETLW
RETLW
RETLW
.
.
.
LOOK-UP TABLES IN PROGRAM
MEMORY
Computed GOTO
Table Reads
OFFSET, W
TABLE
PCL
nnh
nnh
nnh
COMPUTED GOTO USING
AN OFFSET VALUE
DS39960B-page 89
nn

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