[ The PC Guide | Introduction to the PC | How the PC
Works ]
Example: What Happens When You Press A Key
To illustrate how the computer works, let's take a very simple example. Let's suppose
you are working in your word processor and you type the letter "M". Here's what
happens, in general terms, when you press the "M" button:
- The keyboard sends an electrical signal, called a scan code, to the computer
saying that a button was pressed.
- The keyboard controller interprets the scan code and determines that the letter pressed
was an "M". It stores this "M" in a special memory location until the
processor is ready to deal with it.
- The controller sends a signal to the processor, called an interrupt. An interrupt tells the processor that some part
of the computer has information for it to process and wants its attention. In this case,
the keyboard controller wants the processor to look at the key you just pressed.
- The processor is almost always doing many things, sharing its time among many tasks. As
a result, most every event must wait its turn. The processor services interrupts based on
their priority. When it is time to deal with the keypress, the processor routes it to the
program for the operating system that you are using.
- Assuming you are using a multi-tasking operating system like Windows, the operating
system software decides which window you pressed the key in and sends a message to that
window telling it a key was pressed.
- The window decides what to do with the keypress. Since in this case it's your word
processor window, and the key you pressed was an ordinary letter, the word processor will
add that letter to its working area for the file you have open. The letter will take one
byte of your computer's memory (RAM). Other keys could be handled differently (for
example, if you pressed the key to tell the word processor to exit).
- The window will then call the operating system to display the letter on the screen.
- The operating system will display the letter on the screen by adding it to your video
card's video memory.
- The next time the video card refreshes your monitor (re-displays what is in its video
memory) the letter will appear on the screen. Most video cards refresh the monitor between 60 and 100 times
per second.
Wow, a lot happens even in a simple example like this! This all appears to occur
instantaneously because the computer is simply operating at a much faster speed than
humans can readily perceive. But despite the illusion created by the speed of the PC, a
lot of activity is going on inside the box for even the most basic activity.
In fact, even in the description above, I omitted many steps and details. To list every
single step could take dozens of pages, even for just this simple example! The processor
itself is handling many thousands of chores every second, and every part of the computer
has a job to do on an ongoing basis. This hopefully gives you some idea of how the
computer processes, moves, and stores information. Notice that in this example all three
activities occurred.
You might feel a bit overwhelmed by this, and think that maybe computers are just too
complicated to understand. Fortunately, we don't really need to understand every little
detail that goes on inside them to buy and use them, or even to build them. It is usually
enough to know what the parts of the computer are and how they interact.
Next: Overview of
Systems and Components
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