An array is a systematic arrangement of similar objects, usually in rows and columns.

The little push-buttons on the upper part of the right electronic device are arranged in an array with 3 columns and 4 rows. The two devices themselves form a very simple array of 2 columns and 1 row.

Array may refer to:

Music

edit

Science

edit
  • Telescope array, a group of telescopes, mirror segments, or radio telescope antennas used to provide high resolution images of astronomical objects
  • Microarray, a lab-on-a-chip which can measure multiple analytes

Mathematics and statistics

edit

Computing

edit

or various kinds of the above, such as:

Technology

edit

Organisations

edit

References

edit

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Xputer

coarse-grained reconfigurable architectures, and consists of a reconfigurable datapath array (rDPA) organized as a two-dimensional array of ALUs (rDPU)

Reconfigurable computing

bits. This problem can be solved by having a coarse grain array (reconfigurable datapath array, rDPA) and a FPGA on the same chip. Coarse-grained architectures

Granularity

units (DPU]) like in a reconfigurable datapath array (rDPA) is called coarse-grained computing or coarse-grained reconfigurability. The granularity of data

CPU cache

designs in ARM Cortex R chip, Intel's way-predicting cache memory, IBM's reconfigurable multi-way associative cache memory and Oracle's dynamic cache replacement

Processor design

cost. Field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) remain common for soft microprocessors and are often used for reconfigurable computing. A CPU design project

Soft microprocessor

System-on-a-chip (SoC) Network-on-a-chip (NoC) Reconfigurable computing Field-programmable gate array (FPGA) VHDL Verilog SystemVerilog Hardware acceleration

High-level synthesis

the tools infer from the high level code a Finite State Machine and a Datapath that implement arithmetic operations. The high-level synthesis process

Spatial architecture

high-performance computing oriented variants. Their base architecture uses reconfigurable arrays of multipliers, adders, and activation-specific functional units