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

Pages: 1-

Assembly books

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-28 15:09

Sup /prog/,

I'm looking to deepen my understanding of x86 assembly (for no reason in particular), any good books you could recommend for me to pirabuy?
I've recently read Professional Assembly Language by Richard Bloom, which was alright I guess, though that book only focuses on AT&T synatx, which doesn't strike me as the enterprise ASM standard nowadays.

Oh, and don't mention anything related to High Level Assembler (HLA); if I wanted to write pseudo-high-level code, I'd use C. HLA is shit. Literally.

Thanks.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-28 15:12

>>1
Can't you get the x86 manuals for free or something? I seem to remember that being brought up multiple times last year.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-28 15:22

I'm seconding OP's request, I might do something useful for a change *grabs fact*.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-28 15:34

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-28 16:51

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:06

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:16

>>6
Where can I get such nice tomes? I can't even make out the titles.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:20

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:24

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:25

>>8
The link orders the books on a CD, you have tricked me. :(

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:36

>>9
A book that devotes a chapter to the binary system? HLA? NO THANK YOU

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 3:55

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 14:27

>>10
lol, half a decade ago they shipped the printed manuals for free.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 20:15

>>13
That was a different time, friend. Manuals don't grow on trees anymore.

Name: Anonymous 2009-07-29 21:24

>>13
actually, it's more like half a year ago.
that's when i got mine

Name: Anonymous 2010-12-06 9:46

Back to /b/, ``GNAA Faggot''

Name: Anonymous 2010-12-21 1:38

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