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K60P100M100SF2RM Datasheet, PDF (58/1809 Pages) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc – K60 Sub-Family Reference Manual
Conventions
1.2.2 Typographic notation
The following typographic notation is used throughout this document:
Example
placeholder, x
code
SR[SCM]
REVNO[6:4], XAD[7:0]
Description
Items in italics are placeholders for information that you provide. Italicized text is also used
for the titles of publications and for emphasis. Plain lowercase letters are also used as
placeholders for single letters and numbers.
Fixed-width type indicates text that must be typed exactly as shown. It is used for instruction
mnemonics, directives, symbols, subcommands, parameters, and operators. Fixed-width
type is also used for example code. Instruction mnemonics and directives in text and tables
are shown in all caps; for example, BSR.
A mnemonic in brackets represents a named field in a register. This example refers to the
Scaling Mode (SCM) field in the Status Register (SR).
Numbers in brackets and separated by a colon represent either:
• A subset of a register's named field
For example, REVNO[6:4] refers to bits 6–4 that are part of the COREREV field that
occupies bits 6–0 of the REVNO register.
• A continuous range of individual signals of a bus
For example, XAD[7:0] refers to signals 7–0 of the XAD bus.
1.2.3 Special terms
The following terms have special meanings:
asserted
deasserted
reserved
Term
Meaning
Refers to the state of a signal as follows:
• An active-high signal is asserted when high (1).
• An active-low signal is asserted when low (0).
Refers to the state of a signal as follows:
• An active-high signal is deasserted when low (0).
• An active-low signal is deasserted when high (1).
In some cases, deasserted signals are described as
negated.
Refers to a memory space, register, or field that is either
reserved for future use or for which, when written to, the
module or chip behavior is unpredictable.
K60 Sub-Family Reference Manual, Rev. 6, Nov 2011
58
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.