On Monday 17 April 2006 07:03 am, Joe R. wrote:
At 03:18 PM 4/16/06 -0600, you wrote:
Chuck Guzis wrote:
Do you want to rephrase that? I do recall a
simple assembler that did
not implement alpha constant strings longer than 2 bytes (as a DW). To
code a long string you had to do something like this:
I found the book on the web after a google search.TEA, an 8080/8085
Co-Resident Editor/assembler I can't find any used copies of the book
however.
I believe that I have a copy that I bought off of E-bay. I went and
looked for it but couldn't find it (I have WAY too many books around here!)
However I did find a book on DBUG by Titus, Titus, Rony and Larsen. It's
one of the Blacksburg series of Bugbooks.
I've found those to be somewhat interesting to read, and wouldn't mind
reading a copy of that one in particular (if you feel like parting with it
for a while :-).
I've never used it but it says that it can run in
1k!
Not surprising there. I was working on a monitor/debugger a while back and it
had just edged past fitting into a 2716 and would fit in a 2732 with lots of
extra room to spare, but I hadn't optimized it for space or cleaned it up
any when I put it aside, some time ago.
--
Member of the toughest, meanest, deadliest, most unrelenting -- and
ablest -- form of life in this section of space, a critter that can
be killed but can't be tamed. --Robert A. Heinlein, "The Puppet Masters"
-
Information is more dangerous than cannon to a society ruled by lies. --James
M Dakin