Datasheet
Section 2 CPU 
    Rev.5.00 Nov. 02, 2005 Page 35 of 500 
   REJ09B0027-0500 
Table 2.11  Absolute Address Access Ranges 
Absolute Address  Access Range 
8 bits (@aa:8)  H'FF00 to H'FFFF 
16 bits (@aa:16)  H'0000 to H'FFFF 
24 bits (@aa:24)  H'0000 to H'FFFF 
Immediate#xx:8, #xx:16, or #xx:32 
The instruction contains 8-bit (#xx:8), 16-bit (#xx:16), or 32-bit (#xx:32) immediate data as an 
operand. 
The ADDS, SUBS, INC, and DEC instructions contain immediate data implicitly. Some bit 
manipulation instructions contain 3-bit immediate data in the instruction code, specifying a bit 
number. The TRAPA instruction contains 2-bit immediate data in its instruction code, specifying a 
vector address. 
Program-Counter Relative@(d:8, PC) or @(d:16, PC) 
This mode is used in the BSR instruction. An 8-bit or 16-bit displacement contained in the 
instruction is sign-extended and added to the 24-bit PC contents to generate a branch address. The 
PC value to which the displacement is added is the address of the first byte of the next instruction, 
so the possible branching range is –126 to +128 bytes (–63 to +64 words) or –32766 to +32768 
bytes (–16383 to +16384 words) from the branch instruction. The resulting value should be an 
even number. 
Memory Indirect@@aa:8 
This mode can be used by the JMP and JSR instructions. The instruction code contains an 8-bit 
absolute address specifying a memory operand. This memory operand contains a branch address. 
The memory operand is accessed by longword access. The first byte of the memory operand is 
ignored, generating a 24-bit branch address. Figure 2.8 shows how to specify branch address for in 
memory indirect mode. The upper bits of the absolute address are all assumed to be 0, so the 
address range is 0 to 255 (H'0000 to H'00FF). 
Note that the first part of the address range is also the exception vector area. 










