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In digital electronics, a register is a group of memory cells that store a collection of bits and continuously output the stored data. It typically consists of a synchronized group of flip-flops in which each flip-flop stores and outputs one bit of the collection. The number of bits a register can store, known as its word size, is equal to the number of flip-flops it contains. It is volatile memory, meaning that the circuit will cease to retain its stored data upon loss of operating power. Registers are characterized in various ways, including by bit storage capacity, signal polarities, logic level and power supply voltages, and timing parameters.
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