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WDM
From SnesLab
Basic Info | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Addressing Mode | Opcode | Length | Speed | ||||
Implied (type 3)[4] | 42 | 2 bytes | 2 cycles |
Flags Affected | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N | V | M | X | D | I | Z | C |
. | . | . | . | . | . | . | . |
WDM (the initials of William David Mensch, the designer of the 65c816) is an instruction that reserves its signature byte for future expansion of the instruction set. None of these extra 256 opcodes were ever implemented, so WDM functions essentially as a two-byte NOP.
No flags are affected, but future expanded WDM opcodes may.
Syntax
WDM
Trivia
- WDM is the only implied addressing instruction that is more than one byte long
- The Labiak textbook does not describe the WDM instruction.
See Also
External Links
- Eyes & Lichty page 523, on WDM: https://archive.org/details/0893037893ProgrammingThe65816/page/n549
- snes9x implementation of WDM: https://github.com/snes9xgit/snes9x/blob/master/cpuops.cpp#L3335
- undisbeliever on WDM: https://undisbeliever.net/snesdev/65816-opcodes.html#wdm-reserved-for-future-expansion
- Table 5-4 Opcode Matrix of official 65c816 datasheet