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In page Complex instruction set computer:

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Contrary to popular simplifications (present also in some academic texts,) not all CISCs are microcoded or have "complex" instructions.[citation needed] As CISC became a catch-all term meaning anything that's not a load–store (RISC) architecture, it's not the number of instructions, nor the complexity of the implementation or of the instructions, that define CISC, but that arithmetic instructions also perform memory accesses.[citation needed][1] Compared to a small 8-bit CISC processor, a RISC floating-point instruction is complex. CISC does not even need to have complex addressing modes; 32- or 64-bit RISC processors may well have more complex addressing modes than small 8-bit CISC processors.