this post was submitted on 14 May 2024
1362 points (99.1% liked)
Programmer Humor
32503 readers
412 users here now
Post funny things about programming here! (Or just rant about your favourite programming language.)
Rules:
- Posts must be relevant to programming, programmers, or computer science.
- No NSFW content.
- Jokes must be in good taste. No hate speech, bigotry, etc.
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm a computer engineering major (still a student tbf), I'm well aware of the difference between CISC and RISC, I was making a joke.
Also, I understand your point, but you should know though that a load-store architecture and a RISC instruction set are not the same thing. The vast majority of RISC ISAs are load-store, but not all load-store architectures are RISC.
http://www.quadibloc.com/arch/sriscint.htm
https://groups.google.com/g/comp.arch/c/IZP5KUJprHw?pli=1
Note that none of this has to do with reducing the number of instructions, which is what people tend to think of when they hear the name.
Both ARM and RISC-V have compressed instructions. Dunno how ARM works but with RISC-V the 16-bit instruction set is freely interspersable with the 32 bit one, which also get their alignment reduced to 16 bits. Gets like 95% of the space reduction possible with full variable-width instructions without overcomplicating the insn decoder.
As to addressing and loads and arithmetic: No such instructions, but every CPU but the tiniest ones are expected to do macro-op fusion for things like indexed loads. Here's an overview.
The MMU thing... well the vector extension can do gather/scatter, I guess it could stay within the letter of "use the MMU once" but definitely not the spirit.