>>/Now, I remember these paperbooks were not too
thick (I once
/>>>/had Emmerichs Tiny Assembler and MONDEB from that class
-
/>>>/unfortunately got lost - TinyAsm at least can be copied from
/>>>/old 1977 Byte issues), so I'am not sure whether it will wear
/>>>/out more than by simply reading the book. Unless you have a
/>>>/multi-page scanner where you'd have to destroy the spine.
/>
Hey I want them for general reading. How many people still
have old Bytes in the local libraries? I liked the tiny assembler
because if I remember right you had structured code to save on
program lables.
Hi,
the library of our research institute has copies from at least 1/1977 completely
in the shelves (they say 1/76 but looking there, the first ones were missing).
At least the three articles of the TinyAsm are there, and I could make scans of
them on demand. You can find an index of Byte at
http://www.devili.iki.fi/library/publication/10.en.html so if you have specific
articles (limited!) you're interested in I could pdf them. I won't scan
everything
due to lack of time, and I won't make them publicly due to copyright concerns, but
we could talk about few articles.
Yes, the tiny assmebler was rather structured, a nice example how to write good
assembler code. Unfortunately, the Byte articles only has a hex dump - the paperbyte
book had a commented disassembly, but I lost that eventually :-(
Regards
Holger