100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

TEST BANK FOR The AVR Microcontroller And Embedded Systems Using Assembly And C By Muhammad Ali Mazidi, Sarmad Naimi, Sepehr Naimi

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
95
Uploaded on
20-11-2021
Written in
2021/2022

Exam (elaborations) TEST BANK FOR The AVR Microcontroller And Embedded Systems Using Assembly And C By Muhammad Ali Mazidi, Sarmad Naimi, Sepehr Naimi Contents CHAPTER 0: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING..................................................................... 5 SECTION 0.1: NUMBERING AND CODING SYSTEMS................................................... 5 SECTION 0.2: DIGITAL PRIMER ........................................................................................ 6 SECTION 0.3: SEMICONDUCTOR MEMORY .................................................................. 8 SECTION 0.4: CPU AND HARVARD ARCHITECTURE................................................ 10 CHAPTER 1: THE AVR MICROCONTROLLERS: HISTORY AND FEATURES.................. 11 SECTION 1.1: MICROCONTROLLERS AND EMBEDDED PROCESSORS............... 11 SECTION 1.2: OVERVIEW OF THE AVR FAMILY ....................................................... 11 CHAPTER 2: AVR ARCHITECTURE & ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING....... 13 SECTION 2.1: THE GENERAL PURPOSE REGISTERS IN THE AVR........................ 13 SECTION 2.2: THE AVR DATA MEMORY ...................................................................... 13 SECTION 2.3: USING INSTRUCTIONS WITH THE DATA MEMORY....................... 14 SECTION 2.4: AVR STATUS REGISTER.......................................................................... 15 SECTION 2.5: AVR DATA FORMAT AND DIRECTIVES.............................................. 16 SECTION 2.6: INSTRUCTION TO AVR ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMING AND .......... 17 SECTION 2.7: ASSEMBLING AN AVR PROGRAM........................................................ 17 SECTION 2.8: THE PROGRAM AND PROGRAM ROM SPACE IN THE AVR ......... 18 SECTION 2.9: RISC ARCHITECTURE IN THE AVR..................................................... 20 CHAPTER 3: BRANCH, CALL AND TIME DELAY LOOP .................................................... 21 SECTION 3.1: BRANCH INSTRUCTIONS AND LOOPING........................................... 21 SECTION 3.2: CALL INSTRUCTIONS AND STACK...................................................... 21 SECTION 3.3: AVR TIME DELAY AND INSTRUCTION PIPELINE........................... 22 CHAPTER 4: AVR I/O PORT PROGRAMMING ...................................................................... 24 SECTION 4.1: I/O PORT PROGRAMMING IN AVR ...................................................... 24 SECTION 4.2: I/O BIT MANIPULATION PROGRAMMING......................................... 25 CHAPTER 5: ARITHMETIC, LOGIC INSTRUCTIONS, AND PROGRAMS.......................... 29 SECTION 5.1: ARITHMETIC INSTRUCTIONS............................................................... 29 SECTION 5.2: SIGNED NUMBER CONCEPTS AND ARITHMETIC OPERATIONS 31 SECTION 5.3: LOGIC AND COMPARE INSTRUCTIONS............................................. 31 SECTION 5.4: ROTATE AND SHIFT INSTRUCTIONS AND DATA SERIALIZATION ................................................................................................................................................... 32 SECTION 5.5: BCD AND ASCII CONVERSION............................................................... 33 CHAPTER 6: AVR ADVANCED ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING................... 35 SECTION 6.1: INTRODUCING SOME MORE ASSEMBLER DIRECTIVES.............. 35 SECTION 6.2: REGISTER AND DIRECT ADDRESSING MODES ............................... 35 SECTION 6.3: REGISTER INDIRECT ADDRESSING MODE....................................... 36 SECTION 6.4: LOOK-UP TABLE AND TABLE PROCESSING..................................... 37 SECTION 6.5: BIT-ADDRESSABILITY............................................................................. 40 SECTION 6.6: ACCESSING EEPROM IN AVR................................................................ 42 SECTION 6.7: CKECKSUM AND ASCII SUBROUTINES.............................................. 45 SECTION 6.8: MACROS....................................................................................................... 48 CHAPTER 7: AVR PROGRAMMING IN C............................................................................... 49 SECTION 7.1: DATA TYPES AND TIME DELAYS IN C................................................ 49 SECTION 7.2: I/O PROGRAMMING IN C ........................................................................ 49 SECTION 7.3: LOGIC OPERATIONS IN C....................................................................... 51 SECTION 7.4: DATA CONVERSION PROGRAMS IN C................................................ 52 SECTION 7.6: MEMORY ALLOCATION IN C ................................................................ 53 CHAPTER 8: AVR HARDWARE CONNECTION .................................................................... 55 Instructor’s Manual for “The AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems” 4 SECTION 8.1: ATMEGA32 PIN CONNECTION .............................................................. 55 SECTION 8.2: AVR FUSE BITS........................................................................................... 55 SECTION 8.3: EXPLAINING THE INTEL HEX FILE FOR AVR ................................. 55 SECTION 8.4: AVR PROGRAMMIN AND TRAINER BOARD ..................................... 56 CHAPTER 9: AVR TIMER PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C.................................. 57 SECTION 9.1: PROGRAMMING TIMERS 0, 1, AND 2................................................... 57 SECTION 9.2: COUNTER PROGRAMMING ................................................................... 59 SECTION 9.3: PROGRAMMING TIMERS IN C .............................................................. 60 Chapter 10: INTERRUPT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C ..................................... 65 SECTION 10.1: AVR INTERRUPTS ................................................................................... 65 SECTION 10.2: PROGRAMMING TIMER INTERRUPTS ............................................. 65 SECTION 10.3: PROGRAMMING EXTERNAL HARDWARE INTERRUPTS ........... 68 SECTION 10.4: INTERRUPT PRIORITY IN THE AVR.................................................. 70 CHAPTER 11: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C................... 71 SECTION 11.1: BASICS OF SERIAL COMMUNICATION............................................ 71 SECTION 11.2: ATMEGA32 CONNECTION TO RS232 ................................................. 71 SECTION 11.3: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY..................... 72 SECTION 11.4: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN C........................................ 74 CHAPTER 12: LCD AND KEYBOARD INTERFACING ......................................................... 76 SECTION 12.1: LCD INTERFACING................................................................................. 76 SECTION 12.2: KEYBOARD INTERFACING .................................................................. 76 CHAPTER 13: ADC, DAC, AND SENSOR INTERFACING .................................................... 77 SECTION 13.1: ADC CHARACTERISTICS ...................................................................... 77 SECTION 13.2: ADC PROGRAMMING IN THE ATMEGA32....................................... 77 SECTION 13.3: SENSOR INTERFACING AND SIGNAL CONDITIONING ............... 78 SECTION 13.4: DAC INTERFACING................................................................................. 78 Chapter 14: RELAY, OPTOISOLATOR, AND STEPPER MOTOR INTERFACING WITH AVR .............................................................................................................................................. 80 SECTION 14.1: RELAYS AND OPTOISOLATORS ......................................................... 80 SECTION 14.2: STEPPER MOTOR INTERFACING....................................................... 80 Chapter 15: INPUT CAPTURE AND WAVE GENERATION IN AVR .................................... 81 SECTION 15.1: WAVE GENERATION USING 8-BIT TIMERS..................................... 81 SECTION 15.2: WAVE GENERATION USING TIMER1................................................ 82 SECTION 15.3: INPUT CAPTURE PROGRAMMING..................................................... 84 SECTION 15.4: C PROGRAMMING .................................................................................. 84 Chapter 16: PWM AND DC MOTOR CONTROL ...................................................................... 87 SECTION 16.1: DC MOTOR INTERFACING AND PWM .............................................. 87 SECTION 16.2: PWM MODES IN 8-BIT TIMERS............................................................ 87 SECTION 16.3: PWM MODES IN TIMER1....................................................................... 89 Chapter 17: SPI PROTOCOL AND MAX7221 DESPLAY INTERFACING............................. 92 SECTION 17.1: SPI BUS PROTOCOL................................................................................ 92 SECTION 17.2: SPI PROGRAMMING IN AVR................................................................ 92 SECTION 17.3: MAX7221 INTERFACING AND PROGRAMMING............................. 92 Chapter 18: I2C PROTOCOL AND DS1307 RTC INTERFACING ........................................... 93 SECTION 18.1: I2C BUS PROTOCOL................................................................................ 93 SECTION 18.2: TWI PROGRAMMING IN AVR.............................................................. 93 SECTION 18.3: AVR TWI PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AN C............................. 93 SECTION 18.4: DS1307 RTC INTERFACING AND PROGRAMMING........................ 95 Instructor’s Manual for “The AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems” 5 CHAPTER 0: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING SECTION 0.1: NUMBERING AND CODING SYSTEMS 1. (a) 1210 = 11002 (b) 12310 = (c) 6310 = (d) 12810 = (e) = 2. (a) = 3610 (b) = 6510 (c) = 2910 (d) 10102 = 1010 (e) = 3410 3. (a) = 2416 (b) = 4116 (c) = 1D16 (d) 10102 = 0A16 (e) = 2216 4. (a) 2B916 = , 69710 (b) F4416 = , (c) 91216 = 1001 0001 00102, (d) 2B16 = , 4310 (e) FFFF16 = , 5. (a) 1210 = 0C16 (b) 12310 = 7B16 (c) 6310 = 3F16 (d) 12810 = 8016 (e) = 3E816 6. (a)

Show more Read less











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
November 20, 2021
Number of pages
95
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Unknown

Subjects

Content preview

,Contents

CHAPTER 0: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING..................................................................... 5
SECTION 0.1: NUMBERING AND CODING SYSTEMS................................................... 5
SECTION 0.2: DIGITAL PRIMER ........................................................................................ 6
SECTION 0.3: SEMICONDUCTOR MEMORY .................................................................. 8
SECTION 0.4: CPU AND HARVARD ARCHITECTURE ................................................ 10
CHAPTER 1: THE AVR MICROCONTROLLERS: HISTORY AND FEATURES.................. 11
SECTION 1.1: MICROCONTROLLERS AND EMBEDDED PROCESSORS............... 11
SECTION 1.2: OVERVIEW OF THE AVR FAMILY ....................................................... 11
CHAPTER 2: AVR ARCHITECTURE & ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING ....... 13
SECTION 2.1: THE GENERAL PURPOSE REGISTERS IN THE AVR........................ 13
SECTION 2.2: THE AVR DATA MEMORY ...................................................................... 13
SECTION 2.3: USING INSTRUCTIONS WITH THE DATA MEMORY....................... 14
SECTION 2.4: AVR STATUS REGISTER .......................................................................... 15
SECTION 2.5: AVR DATA FORMAT AND DIRECTIVES.............................................. 16
SECTION 2.6: INSTRUCTION TO AVR ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMING AND .......... 17
SECTION 2.7: ASSEMBLING AN AVR PROGRAM........................................................ 17
SECTION 2.8: THE PROGRAM AND PROGRAM ROM SPACE IN THE AVR ......... 18
SECTION 2.9: RISC ARCHITECTURE IN THE AVR ..................................................... 20
CHAPTER 3: BRANCH, CALL AND TIME DELAY LOOP .................................................... 21
SECTION 3.1: BRANCH INSTRUCTIONS AND LOOPING........................................... 21
SECTION 3.2: CALL INSTRUCTIONS AND STACK ...................................................... 21
SECTION 3.3: AVR TIME DELAY AND INSTRUCTION PIPELINE ........................... 22
CHAPTER 4: AVR I/O PORT PROGRAMMING ...................................................................... 24
SECTION 4.1: I/O PORT PROGRAMMING IN AVR ...................................................... 24
SECTION 4.2: I/O BIT MANIPULATION PROGRAMMING......................................... 25
CHAPTER 5: ARITHMETIC, LOGIC INSTRUCTIONS, AND PROGRAMS.......................... 29
SECTION 5.1: ARITHMETIC INSTRUCTIONS............................................................... 29
SECTION 5.2: SIGNED NUMBER CONCEPTS AND ARITHMETIC OPERATIONS 31
SECTION 5.3: LOGIC AND COMPARE INSTRUCTIONS............................................. 31
SECTION 5.4: ROTATE AND SHIFT INSTRUCTIONS AND DATA SERIALIZATION
................................................................................................................................................... 32
SECTION 5.5: BCD AND ASCII CONVERSION............................................................... 33
CHAPTER 6: AVR ADVANCED ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING ................... 35
SECTION 6.1: INTRODUCING SOME MORE ASSEMBLER DIRECTIVES .............. 35
SECTION 6.2: REGISTER AND DIRECT ADDRESSING MODES ............................... 35
SECTION 6.3: REGISTER INDIRECT ADDRESSING MODE....................................... 36
SECTION 6.4: LOOK-UP TABLE AND TABLE PROCESSING..................................... 37
SECTION 6.5: BIT-ADDRESSABILITY ............................................................................. 40
SECTION 6.6: ACCESSING EEPROM IN AVR................................................................ 42
SECTION 6.7: CKECKSUM AND ASCII SUBROUTINES .............................................. 45
SECTION 6.8: MACROS ....................................................................................................... 48
CHAPTER 7: AVR PROGRAMMING IN C ............................................................................... 49
SECTION 7.1: DATA TYPES AND TIME DELAYS IN C................................................ 49
SECTION 7.2: I/O PROGRAMMING IN C ........................................................................ 49
SECTION 7.3: LOGIC OPERATIONS IN C....................................................................... 51
SECTION 7.4: DATA CONVERSION PROGRAMS IN C................................................ 52
SECTION 7.6: MEMORY ALLOCATION IN C ................................................................ 53
CHAPTER 8: AVR HARDWARE CONNECTION .................................................................... 55



Instructor’s Manual for “The AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems” 3

, SECTION 8.1: ATMEGA32 PIN CONNECTION .............................................................. 55
SECTION 8.2: AVR FUSE BITS........................................................................................... 55
SECTION 8.3: EXPLAINING THE INTEL HEX FILE FOR AVR ................................. 55
SECTION 8.4: AVR PROGRAMMIN AND TRAINER BOARD ..................................... 56
CHAPTER 9: AVR TIMER PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C.................................. 57
SECTION 9.1: PROGRAMMING TIMERS 0, 1, AND 2 ................................................... 57
SECTION 9.2: COUNTER PROGRAMMING ................................................................... 59
SECTION 9.3: PROGRAMMING TIMERS IN C .............................................................. 60
Chapter 10: INTERRUPT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C ..................................... 65
SECTION 10.1: AVR INTERRUPTS ................................................................................... 65
SECTION 10.2: PROGRAMMING TIMER INTERRUPTS ............................................. 65
SECTION 10.3: PROGRAMMING EXTERNAL HARDWARE INTERRUPTS ........... 68
SECTION 10.4: INTERRUPT PRIORITY IN THE AVR.................................................. 70
CHAPTER 11: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AND C ................... 71
SECTION 11.1: BASICS OF SERIAL COMMUNICATION ............................................ 71
SECTION 11.2: ATMEGA32 CONNECTION TO RS232 ................................................. 71
SECTION 11.3: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY..................... 72
SECTION 11.4: AVR SERIAL PORT PROGRAMMING IN C........................................ 74
CHAPTER 12: LCD AND KEYBOARD INTERFACING ......................................................... 76
SECTION 12.1: LCD INTERFACING ................................................................................. 76
SECTION 12.2: KEYBOARD INTERFACING .................................................................. 76
CHAPTER 13: ADC, DAC, AND SENSOR INTERFACING .................................................... 77
SECTION 13.1: ADC CHARACTERISTICS ...................................................................... 77
SECTION 13.2: ADC PROGRAMMING IN THE ATMEGA32 ....................................... 77
SECTION 13.3: SENSOR INTERFACING AND SIGNAL CONDITIONING ............... 78
SECTION 13.4: DAC INTERFACING................................................................................. 78
Chapter 14: RELAY, OPTOISOLATOR, AND STEPPER MOTOR INTERFACING WITH
AVR .............................................................................................................................................. 80
SECTION 14.1: RELAYS AND OPTOISOLATORS ......................................................... 80
SECTION 14.2: STEPPER MOTOR INTERFACING ....................................................... 80
Chapter 15: INPUT CAPTURE AND WAVE GENERATION IN AVR .................................... 81
SECTION 15.1: WAVE GENERATION USING 8-BIT TIMERS..................................... 81
SECTION 15.2: WAVE GENERATION USING TIMER1 ................................................ 82
SECTION 15.3: INPUT CAPTURE PROGRAMMING..................................................... 84
SECTION 15.4: C PROGRAMMING .................................................................................. 84
Chapter 16: PWM AND DC MOTOR CONTROL ...................................................................... 87
SECTION 16.1: DC MOTOR INTERFACING AND PWM .............................................. 87
SECTION 16.2: PWM MODES IN 8-BIT TIMERS............................................................ 87
SECTION 16.3: PWM MODES IN TIMER1 ....................................................................... 89
Chapter 17: SPI PROTOCOL AND MAX7221 DESPLAY INTERFACING ............................. 92
SECTION 17.1: SPI BUS PROTOCOL ................................................................................ 92
SECTION 17.2: SPI PROGRAMMING IN AVR ................................................................ 92
SECTION 17.3: MAX7221 INTERFACING AND PROGRAMMING ............................. 92
Chapter 18: I2C PROTOCOL AND DS1307 RTC INTERFACING ........................................... 93
SECTION 18.1: I2C BUS PROTOCOL................................................................................ 93
SECTION 18.2: TWI PROGRAMMING IN AVR .............................................................. 93
SECTION 18.3: AVR TWI PROGRAMMING IN ASSEMBLY AN C............................. 93
SECTION 18.4: DS1307 RTC INTERFACING AND PROGRAMMING ........................ 95




Instructor’s Manual for “The AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems” 4

, CHAPTER 0: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING
SECTION 0.1: NUMBERING AND CODING SYSTEMS
1.
(a) 1210 = 11002
(b) 12310 = 0111 10112
(c) 6310 = 0011 11112
(d) 12810 = 1000 00002
(e) 100010 = 0011 1110 10002
2.
(a) 1001002 = 3610
(b) 10000012 = 6510
(c) 111012 = 2910
(d) 10102 = 1010
(e) 001000102 = 3410
3.
(a) 1001002 = 2416
(b) 10000012 = 4116
(c) 111012 = 1D16
(d) 10102 = 0A16
(e) 001000102 = 2216
4.
(a) 2B916 = 0010 1011 10012, 69710
(b) F4416 = 1111 0100 01002, 390810
(c) 91216 = 1001 0001 00102, 232210
(d) 2B16 = 0010 10112, 4310
(e) FFFF16 = 1111 1111 1111 11112, 6553510
5.
(a) 1210 = 0C16
(b) 12310 = 7B16
(c) 6310 = 3F16
(d) 12810 = 8016
(e) 100010 = 3E816
6.
(a) 1001010 Î 0011 0110
(b) 111001 Î 0000 0111
(c) 10000010 Î 0111 1110
(d) 111110001 Î 0000 1111
7.
(a) 2C+3F = 6B
(b) F34+5D6 = 150A
(c) 20000+12FF = 212FF
(d) FFFF+2222 = 12221
8.
(a) 24F-129 = 12616



Instructor’s Manual for “The AVR Microcontroller and Embedded Systems” 5

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
Expert001 Chamberlain School Of Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
795
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
566
Documents
1190
Last sold
1 day ago
Expert001

High quality, well written Test Banks, Guides, Solution Manuals and Exams to enhance your learning potential and take your grades to new heights. Kindly leave a review and suggestions. We do take pride in our high-quality services and we are always ready to support all clients.

4.2

159 reviews

5
104
4
18
3
14
2
7
1
16

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions