PIC18F6490-E/PT Microchip Technology, PIC18F6490-E/PT Datasheet - Page 110

IC PIC MCU FLASH 16KX16 64TQFP

PIC18F6490-E/PT

Manufacturer Part Number
PIC18F6490-E/PT
Description
IC PIC MCU FLASH 16KX16 64TQFP
Manufacturer
Microchip Technology
Series
PIC® 18Fr

Specifications of PIC18F6490-E/PT

Core Processor
PIC
Core Size
8-Bit
Speed
40MHz
Connectivity
I²C, SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, HLVD, LCD, POR, PWM, WDT
Number Of I /o
50
Program Memory Size
16KB (8K x 16)
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Ram Size
768 x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
4.2 V ~ 5.5 V
Data Converters
A/D 12x10b
Oscillator Type
Internal
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 125°C
Package / Case
64-TFQFP
For Use With
DM163028 - BOARD DEMO PICDEM LCD
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Contains lead / RoHS non-compliant
Eeprom Size
-

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
PIC18F6490-E/PT
Manufacturer:
Microchip Technology
Quantity:
10 000
PIC18F6390/6490/8390/8490
8.6
External interrupts on the RB0/INT0, RB1/INT1, RB2/
INT2 and RB3/INT3 pins are edge-triggered. If the
corresponding INTEDGx bit in the INTCON2 register is
set (= 1), the interrupt is triggered by a rising edge; if the
bit is clear, the trigger is on the falling edge. When a valid
edge appears on the RBx/INTx pin, the corresponding
flag bit INTxIF is set. This interrupt can be disabled by
clearing the corresponding enable bit, INTxIE. The
interrupt flag bit must be cleared in software in the
Interrupt Service Routine before re-enabling the
interrupt.
All external interrupts (INT0, INT1, INT2 and INT3) can
wake-up the processor from the power-managed
modes if bit INTxIE was set prior to going into the
power-managed modes. If the Global Interrupt Enable
bit, GIE, is set, the processor will branch to the interrupt
vector following wake-up.
Interrupt priority for INT1, INT2 and INT3 is determined
by the value contained in the interrupt priority bits,
INT1IP (INTCON3<6>), INT2IP (INTCON3<7>) and
INT3IP (INTCON2<1>). There is no priority bit
associated with INT0. It is always a high-priority
interrupt source.
EXAMPLE 8-1:
DS39629C-page 108
MOVWF
MOVFF
MOVFF
;
; USER ISR CODE
;
MOVFF
MOVF
MOVFF
INTx Pin Interrupts
W_TEMP
STATUS, STATUS_TEMP
BSR, BSR_TEMP
BSR_TEMP, BSR
W_TEMP, W
STATUS_TEMP, STATUS
SAVING STATUS, WREG AND BSR REGISTERS IN RAM
; W_TEMP is in virtual bank
; STATUS_TEMP located anywhere
; BSR_TMEP located anywhere
; Restore BSR
; Restore WREG
; Restore STATUS
8.7
In 8-bit mode (which is the default), an overflow in the
TMR0 register (FFh → 00h) will set flag bit, TMR0IF. In
16-bit mode, an overflow in the TMR0H:TMR0L regis-
ter pair (FFFFh → 0000h) will set TMR0IF. The interrupt
can be enabled/disabled by setting/clearing enable bit,
TMR0IE (INTCON<5>). Interrupt priority for Timer0 is
determined by the value contained in the interrupt
priority bit, TMR0IP (INTCON2<2>). See Section 10.0
“Timer0 Module” for further details on the Timer0
module.
8.8
An input change on PORTB<7:4> sets flag bit, RBIF
(INTCON<0>). The interrupt can be enabled/disabled
by setting/clearing enable bit, RBIE (INTCON<3>).
Interrupt priority for PORTB interrupt-on-change is
determined by the value contained in the interrupt
priority bit, RBIP (INTCON2<0>).
8.9
During interrupts, the return PC address is saved on
the stack. Additionally, the WREG, STATUS and BSR
registers are saved on the fast return stack. If a fast
return from interrupt is not used (see Section 5.3
“Data Memory Organization”), the user may need to
save the WREG, STATUS and BSR registers on entry
to the Interrupt Service Routine. Depending on the
user’s application, other registers may also need to be
saved. Example 8-1 saves and restores the WREG,
STATUS and BSR registers during an Interrupt Service
Routine.
TMR0 Interrupt
PORTB Interrupt-on-Change
Context Saving During Interrupts
© 2007 Microchip Technology Inc.

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