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  2. Extended memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_memory

    Extended memory is located above 1 MB, includes the high memory area, and ends at 16 MB on the Intel 286 and at 4 GB on the Intel 386DX and later. In DOS memory management, extended memory refers to memory above the first megabyte (2 20 bytes) of address space in an IBM PC or compatible with an 80286 or later processor.

  3. Extensible programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensible_programming

    In computer science, extensible programming is a style of computer programming that focuses on mechanisms to extend the programming language, compiler, and runtime system (environment). Extensible programming languages, supporting this style of programming, were an active area of work in the 1960s, but the movement was marginalized in the 1970s ...

  4. Extensibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensibility

    Under this form of extensibility, a software system can be extended by modifying the source code, and it is the most flexible and the least restrictive form. There are two sub-forms of extensibility, open-box extensibility and glass-box extensibility, depending on how changes are applied.

  5. Expanded memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanded_memory

    Several expanded-memory pages are bank-switched in the page frame, part of the upper memory area. In DOS memory management, expanded memory is a system of bank switching that provided additional memory to DOS programs beyond the limit of conventional memory (640 KiB). Expanded memory is an

  6. Method stub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_stub

    In Windows and DOS, stub is like a shim – small interface code left in conventional memory by self-relocating resident drivers which move most of themselves into upper memory, the high memory area, expanded or extended memory as well as similar stubs to allow the relocated code to communicate with real-mode DOS in conjunction with DOS extenders (like DPMI, DPMS, CLOAKING or NIOS).

  7. EMM386 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EMM386

    EMM386 is the expanded memory manager of Microsoft's MS-DOS, IBM's PC DOS, Digital Research's DR-DOS, and Datalight's ROM-DOS [1] which is used to create expanded memory using extended memory on Intel 80386 CPUs. There also is an EMM386.EXE available in FreeDOS. [2]

  8. DOS memory management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_memory_management

    The 640 KiB limit imposed great complexity on hardware and software intended to circumvent it; the physical memory in a machine could be organised as a combination of base or conventional memory (including lower memory), upper memory, high memory (not the same as upper memory), extended memory, and expanded memory, all handled in different ways.

  9. Parallel programming model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_programming_model

    In computing, a parallel programming model is an abstraction of parallel computer architecture, with which it is convenient to express algorithms and their composition in programs. The value of a programming model can be judged on its generality : how well a range of different problems can be expressed for a variety of different architectures ...

  1. Related searches extended memory and expanded language definition computer programming software

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