You can measure it. You can calculate it from other data; the details vary on the specific situation. For example, for a rectangle:area = width x length If you happen to know two of the numbers, you can calculate the third one with this formula.
appropriate unit to measure the width of a textbook = ce ntimeters
A tape measure
with a tape measure. the CSA
You can measure it. In some cases, you can calculate it based on other data. For more details, I would need to know what information is known about the problem.
In technology, the bus is used to carry data. The width of a data bus helps determine the amount of bytes that can be carried out each second.
The width of a data bus is referred to as the data path size. An example would be a 16 bit bus can transmit 16 bits of information
Intel has released processor with a variety of bus / memory widths. The 386SX had a 16-bit data width, the 386DX and 486 had a 32-bit bus width, and the Pentium had a 64-bit data bus.
processing speed of the computer will be increased when the data bus is wider
The density of the module
The bigger the data bus, the more data can be fetched in one go and processed, making the computer faster
density
bus width
Not necessarily. In the 8085, for instance, this is true. In the 8088, however, the processor is a 16 bit processor with an 8 bit data bus. The same is true for the 80386sx - it is a 32 bit processor on a 16 bit bus.
Because its a microcontroller with an 8 bit data bus width.
Cva:The data rate depends on the bus width. The no. of bytes that can be transferred per bus cycle = buswidth/8;
A Bus is a large transport vehicle, if you put it in a computer it would damage it consierably or likely destroy it, thus stopping data transfer