|
NGASM 8086/8088 Assembler 1.3 - Simplifies learning assembly language wiith 7000-line programmer's manual - FREE
|
Details |
Size: 0.08 MB
License: Freeware
OS: Win 3.1x,Win95,Win98,WinME,WinNT 3.x,WinNT 4.x,Windows2000,WinXP,MS-DOS
Developer:Systech Software (» more programs)
View: Antivirus Report |
|
|
New in this version: Symbol Table overflow done away with
NGASM 8086/8088 Assembler checked and founded to be 100% clean:
Archive: ngasm13.zip
inflating: NGASM.COM
inflating: NGASM.DOC
inflating: MANUAL.DOC
inflating: ROUTINES.NGA
inflating: RFPOrderingInfo.html
inflating: RFDOrderingInfo.html
inflating: NGASM.XML
Scan Results of RFDOrderingInfo.html
RFDOrderingInfo.html: OK
Scan Results of NGASM.XML
NGASM.XML: OK
Scan Results of RFPOrderingInfo.html
RFPOrderingInfo.html: OK
Scan Results of NGASM.COM
NGASM.COM: OK
Scan Results of MANUAL.DOC
MANUAL.DOC: OK
Scan Results of NGASM.DOC
NGASM.DOC: OK
Scan Results of ROUTINES.NGA
ROUTINES.NGA: OK
Scan Results of ngasm13.zip
ngasm13.zip: OK
Known viruses: 78376
Scanned directories: 1
Scanned files: 8
Infected files: 0
Data scanned: 0.37 MB
Time: 1.690 sec (0 m 1 s)
Use the below code to display the award image on your website:
Publisher's Description:
NGASM 8086 / 8088 Assembler simplifies learning Assembly Language with a 7000-line long manual that elaborately describes exact usage of Assembler Instructions. You understand any Instruction in a single reading. Lots of small routines and unbelievably tiny ready-to-assemble-and-run programs are provided.
If you are someone who likes to write your own code, you need an Assembler. If you wonder who is creating/opening a file, etc, you need to learn none other than Assembly Language. Because other programming languages conceal code that actually ends up in the executable. And NGASM 8086/8088 Assembler is a very good starting point even for those who threw away an Assembler primer. You will see what your instinct can do for you.
Uses only 5 operators and 10 directives (only the mostly used ones).
You can write anything Ralf Brown's Interrupt list makes you feel like writing, that is, for up to WINDOWS XP. The code runs in a DOS box; that is ok compared to being able to do nothing in the investigation of a problem on the computer (for years, sometimes). Users on WINDOWS XP too still have a chance to write and run TSR's. Accompanying FREE Programmer's Manual lands you on TSR's and debugging ON DAY ONE.
You need not keep looking for a library for code that handles files with long file names, for example. You can write all by yourself. Sometimes, half way through, you get the "can do anything" feeling that is priceless. Other programming languages (except database languages) grill you more - make you read a lot of theory as if you are preparing for an exam the next day - than the power they can deliver into your hands (even after years, sometimes).
If you are in need of endless excitement, you can get down to calling BIOS and DOS interrupts.
Don't read the theory a lot. Use DEBUG.EXE always until you confidently write your own code.
Your CPU Registers are waiting.
If all this is hype in favor of an old programming language, pray for more godfathers.
|