32-bit
32-bit is a term applied to processors, and computer architectures which manipulate the address and data in 32-bit chunks. It is also a term given to a generation of computers where 32-bit processors were the norm.
| N-bit computers |
|---|
| 2-bit | 4-bit | 8-bit | 16-bit | 32-bit | 64-bit | 128-bit |
| N-bit applications |
| 2-bit application | 4-bit application | 8-bit application | 16-bit application | 32-bit application | 64-bit application | 128-bit application |
The range of integer values that can be stored in 32 bits is 0 through 4294967295, or -2147483648 through 2147483647 using two's complement coding. Hence, a 32-bit processor can address 4GB of byte-addressable memory.
The external address and data buses are often wider than 32-bits but both of these are stored and manipulated internally in the processor as 32-bit quantities. For example, the Pentium Pro processor is a 32-bit machine, but the external address bus is 36-bits wide, and the external data bus is 64-bits wide.
See also: 32-bit application, 32-bit era, 16-bit, 16-bit application, 64-bit
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