From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
An instruction set, or instruction set architecture (ISA), is a specification detailing the commands that a computer's CPU should be able to understand and execute, or the set of all commands implemented by a particular CPU design. The term describes the aspects of a computer or microprocessor typically visible to a programmer, including the native datatypes, instructions, registers, memory architecture, interrupt and fault system, and external I/O (if any). "Instruction set architecture" is sometimes used to distinguish this set of characteristics from the Micro-Architecture, which are the elements and techniques used to implement the ISA, e.g. microcode, pipelining, cache systems, etc.
Computers with different internal designs can share a common instruction set, e.g. the Intel Pentium and the AMD Athlon both implement nearly identical versions of the x86 instruction set, but have radically different internal designs.
When designing processor cores, Register Transfer Language RTL is used to define the operation of each Instruction of an Instruction Set.
List of ISAs:
- MIPS
- Motorola 6800
- ARM
- PowerPC
- x86 (Pentium)
- ALGOL Object Code, commonly used as

