HOW INFORMATION IS HANDLED
IN THE MACHINE
The machine is a mechanical brain. So, between taking in information and putting out information, the machine does some “thinking.” It does this thinking according to instructions. The instructions go into the machine as: (1) the setting of switches, or (2) the pressing of buttons, or (3) the wiring of plugboards, or (4) feeding in tape punched with holes. The instructions are remembered in the machine in these 4 ways, and we can call these sets of devices the control of the machine.
To illustrate: One of the buttons pressed for every problem is the Start Key: when you press it, the machine starts to work on the problem. One of the switches with which you give instructions is a switch that turns electric typewriter 1 on or off. One of the plugboards contains some hubs by which you can tell the machine how many figures to choose in the quotient when dividing, for clearly you do not need a quotient of 23 figures every time the machine divides. You can have 5 choices in any one problem; you can specify them by plugging, and you can call for any one of 5 choices of quotient size from time to time during the problem. In many cases, when we wish the machine to do the same thing for all of a single problem and do it whenever the occasion arises, we can put the instruction into the wiring of a plugboard. We use plugboard wiring, for example, in fixing the decimal point in multiplication, so that the product will read out properly, and in guiding the operation of the typewriters, so that printing will take place in the columns where we want it.
Sequence of Steps
The most important part of the control of the machine is the sequence-tape feed and its sequence-control tape. These tell the machine a great part of what operations are to be performed.
Fig. 10. Sequence-control tape code.
At the end of the room where the machine is, there is the special tape punch mentioned above. It holds a big spool of card stock that is thin, flexible, smooth, and tough. With one keyboard we may prepare value tape. With another keyboard we prepare the sequence-control tape. The tape ([see Fig. 10]) contains places for 24 round punched holes in each row. Some and only some of these holes are punched. Each row of punched holes is equivalent to an instruction to the machine and is called a line of coding or coding line. In general, the instruction has the form:
- Take a number out of Register A;
- put the number into Register B;
- and perform operation C.
The first group of 8 holes at the left is called the A field or the out-field. Here we tell the machine where a number is to be taken from. The middle group of 8 holes is called the B field or the in-field. Here we tell the machine where a number is to be put. The last group of 8 holes is called the C field or the miscellaneous field. Here we tell the machine part or all of the operation that is to be performed.