ARM7
| General information | |
|---|---|
| Designed by | ARM Holdings | 
| Architecture and classification | |
| Instruction set | ARM (32-bit) (ARMv3) | 
| Architecture and classification | |
|---|---|
| Instruction set | ARM (32-bit), Thumb (16-bit) (ARMv4T) | 
| Architecture and classification | |
|---|---|
| Instruction set | ARM (32-bit), Thumb (16-bit), Jazelle (8-bit) (ARMv5TEJ) | 
ARM7 is a group of 32-bit RISC ARM processor cores licensed by ARM Holdings for microcontroller use. The ARM7 core family consists of ARM700, ARM710, ARM7DI, ARM710a, ARM720T, ARM740T, ARM710T, ARM7TDMI, ARM7TDMI-S, ARM7EJ-S. The ARM7TDMI and ARM7TDMI-S were the most popular cores of the family. ARM7 cores were released from 1993 to 2001 and no longer recommended for new IC designs; newer alternatives are ARM Cortex-M cores.