DocumentCode
3557783
Title
Charles Babbage´s Analytical Engine, 1838
Author
Bromley, Allan G.
Volume
4
Issue
3
fYear
1982
Firstpage
196
Lastpage
217
Abstract
Charles Babbage commenced work on the design of the Analytical Engine in 1834 following the collapse of the project to build the Difference Engine. His ideas evolved rapidly, and by 1838 most of the important concepts used in his later designs were established. This paper introduces the design of the Analytical Engine as it stood in early 1838, concentrating on the overall functional organization of the mill (or central processing portion) and the methods generally used for the basic arithmetic operations of multiplication, division, and signed addition. The paper describes the working of the mechanisms that Babbage devised for storing, transferring, and adding numbers and how they were organized together by the "microprogrammed" control system; the paper also introduces the facilities provided for user- level programming. The intention of the paper is to show that an automatic computing machine could be built using mechanical devices, and that Babbage\´s designs provide both an effective set of basic mechanisms and a workable organization of a complete machine.
Keywords
Arithmetic; Automatic control; Control systems; Difference engines; History; Information processing; Milling machines; Software design;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Annals of the History of Computing
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0164-1239
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MAHC.1982.10028
Filename
4640697
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