Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

Pages: 1-

x86 Assembly

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-29 20:57

Sup /prog/. I'm trying to learn x86 assembly. I need a guide geared toward someone who (get this) has never programmed in anything more than BASIC before. Don't get me wrong, I know what interrupts and bit shifting and all that jazz are, I understand most of the terms and how different things actually work. I just want a guide that doesn't try to assume that I know what all those goddamn instructions mean.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-29 21:25

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-29 22:07

http://www.intel.com/products/processor/manuals/

After reading those you will "know what all those goddamn instructions mean."

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 3:17

why would you want to learn assemble? It's not 80s any more.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 3:29

Blum, Richard. Professional Assembly Language. Wrox, 2005.

Well, this book assumes that you already have a bit of previous programming experience. It is, however, pretty good, in my humble opinion.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 4:25

>>5
The word-to-comma ratio was astoundingly high in your post. What gives?

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 5:20

>>6
ou mean lo

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 5:58

>>3
And for AMD?

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 6:02

>>7
Yeah, I meant to say comma-to-word. It's times like these I wish BBS had an edit post feature.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 6:03

>>8
You best be kidding.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 7:34

Assembly Language Step-By-Step - Programming With DOS And Linux, 2nd Edition (2000).chm
The Art Of Assembly Language (2003).chm
Guide To Assembly Language Programming In Linux (2005).pdf
Introduction To 80x86 Assembly Language And Computer Architecture (2001).pdf
Professional Assembly Language (2005).pdf

http://www.mediafire.com/?mtcgxuuk2jo

What, pay for books? You must be joking!

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 8:47

>>11
Thanks, I had been looking for the last one

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 9:01

>>11
Yes, thanks!

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 16:30

>>11
Also, Intel will mail you the whole box set processor manuals for free if you order them.

http://www.intel.com/design/literature.htm

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 16:42

GAS

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-30 17:09

I seem to remember AoA wasn't too terrible. That was a while back though, seems it's gone entirely HLA these days, which I'm not sure I approve of. I don't recall it being this verbose either.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-01 7:06

>>16
HLA is not Asm nor is it "high-level". It's a half-breed.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-01 9:51

>>17
I have to agree with this person. HLA is a bastardization of real assembly. If I want to program `high-level', I don't use ASM.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-01 17:23

>>14
Do they ship to Yurop for free? I'm totally getting a copy if so.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-01 18:20

>>19
I had mine shipped to Gensokyo and it was free, they just took 200 years to arrive...

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-01 19:01

>>20

gp2/v

Name: Anonymous 2009-08-03 8:17

gp2x

Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List