ACME ...the ACME Crossassembler for Multiple Environments - free software - (C) 1998-2017 Marco Baye ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: Copyright ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ACME - a crossassembler for producing 6502/6510/65c02/65816 code. Copyright (C) 1998-2017 Marco Baye The ACME icon was designed by Wanja "Brix" Gayk This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: Introduction ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ACME is a crossassembler for the 65xx range of processors. It knows about the standard 6502, the 65c02 and the 65816. It also supports the undocumented ("illegal") opcodes of the 6510 processor (a 6502- variant that is used in the Commodore C=64), and the extensions added in the C64DTV2. This text and the other files in the same directory only describe the basic functions independent of the platform used. There should be another help file in this archive that outlines the features specific to your platform. The files in the docs directory and what they contain: 65816.txt Stuff specific to the 65816 processor AddrModes.txt How to choose non-standard addressing modes AllPOs.txt Lists ACME's pseudo opcodes. Use as a reference. Changes.txt The change log COPYING Version 2 of the GNU General Public License Errors.txt Lists ACME's error messages and what they mean. Example.txt Information on how to assemble the example sources. Floats.txt About the support for floating-point values Help.txt ...is this text. Illegals.txt Support for undocumented opcodes Lib.txt Information about the library QuickRef.txt All the basic stuff about ACME Source.txt How to compile ACME Upgrade.txt Incompatibilities to earlier versions cputypes.txt Instruction sets of target CPUs IMPORTANT: If you upgrade from ACME 0.05 or earlier, don't forget to read the file "Upgrade.txt" - release 0.07 and all later ones are slightly incompatible to 0.05 and earlier. If you want to start using ACME right away, read the file "QuickRef.txt", it contains the main help text. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: What it can and does ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ACME is a crossassembler. ACME can produce code for the 6502, 6510, 65c02 and 65816 processors. It does this *fast*. It can produce at most 64 KBytes of code. You can use global labels, local labels and anonymous labels. It is fast. You can use global and local macros. You can use conditional assembly. You can use looping assembly (There are two ways to do this; a very simple and a very flexible one). You can include other source files. You can include binary files (either whole or parts) directly into the output. You can use offset assembly (code that is designed to run at a different address). It is fast. ACME's maths parser uses operator priorities, so 1+2*3 will correctly give 7 (unlike some other free assemblers that give 9 instead). ACME's maths parser has no problems concerning parentheses and indirect addressing modes. ACME's maths parser knows a shit load of different operations. ACME supports both integer and floating point maths operations. You can dump the global symbols into a file. ACME supports a library of commonly used macros and symbols. It always takes as many passes as are needed. ACME exists on several platforms, meaning you can easily exchange your sources with other people (preferring other OSes). ACME can convert its strings to PetSCII and screen code (Okay, this is C64-specific). ACME has a rudimentary type checking system to catch errors like missing '#' characters. Did I mention that it is fast? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: What it can't and doesn't ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ACME cannot transfer data to a C64 or another computer. ACME does not produce ".o65"-format linkable object files. ACME cannot produce more than 64 KB (would be useful for the 65816). ACME cannot disassemble or relocate given code files. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: Platform independence ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ACME was initially developed under RISC OS. Currently there are platform-specific versions available for AmigaOS, DOS, Linux, Windows and RISC OS. The Linux sources should be ready to compile on most other UNIX-like systems as well. In the future there will hopefully also be a version that runs on the C64/128. Though the source code does not exactly look like it *g*, ACME was written with portability in mind: Some of its limitations were included on purpose, just to allow a C64/128 version. To successfully assemble multi-file source codes from other platforms, the file names have to be altered as little as possible. Please name all your files that may be distributed in a sensible way, for example by limiting their file names to 8+3 format. I really hate this stupid will-it- ever-die DOS convention, but using it is the only way to ensure portability of files. Please use ".a" as the file name extension of ACME source code files. All file names used inside source code files have to be given in UNIX style, ACME will convert them to the current host platform style if needed. There should be no problems concerning newline characters, ACME was designed to cope with CR, LF and CRLF. A minor problem is the different character tables used on different systems. As all predefined ACME keywords only use 7-bit ASCII, the assembler will work on any system that uses a superset of this character table: UTF-8, ANSI, ISO 8859, etc. Symbol names can contain top-bit-set characters - these may look strange if the sources are edited on a different platform, but ACME will still work. If you want to port ACME to another platform, please inform me so that I can add your version to the ones already present on the ACME homepage. As the sources are released under the GNU General Public License, you are not forced to do this; but it would help to make ACME available to other users. The same goes for any changes or enhancements to the sources: Please send me a copy so that the changes can be incorporated into the next "official" release on the ACME home page. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Section: Contacting the author ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The newest version of ACME can be found at the ACME homepage: http://sourceforge.net/p/acme-crossass/ If you want to report a bug or make a suggestion, then simply send me an email: mailto:marco@baye.de