1
0
mirror of https://github.com/fadden/6502bench.git synced 2024-12-10 21:49:27 +00:00
Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andy McFadden
5f472b60cf ORG rework, part 3
Split ".org" into ".arstart" and ".arend" (address range start/end).
Address range ends are now shown in the code list view, and the
pseudo-op can be edited in app settings.  Address range starts are
now shown after notes and long comments, rather than before, which
brings the on-screen display in sync with generated code.

Reworked the address range editor UI to include the new features.
The implementation is fully broken.

More changes to the AddressMap API, putting the resolved region length
into a separate ActualLength field.  Added FindRegion().  Renamed
some things.

Code generation changed slightly: the blank line before a region-end
line now comes after it, and ACME's "} ;!pseudopc" is now just "}".
This required minor updates to some of the regression test results.
2021-09-22 15:28:11 -07:00
Andy McFadden
39b7b20144 ORG rework, part 1
This is the first step toward changing the address region map from a
linear list to a hierarchy.  See issue #107 for the plan.

The AddressMap class has been rewritten to support the new approach.
The rest of the project has been updated to conform to the new API,
but feature-wise is unchanged.  While the map class supports
nested regions with explicit lengths, the rest of the application
still assumes a series of non-overlapping regions with "floating"
lengths.

The Set Address dialog is currently non-functional.

All of the output for cc65 changed because generation of segment
comments has been removed.  Some of the output for ACME changed as
well, because we no longer follow "* = addr" with a redundant
pseudopc statement.  ACME and 65tass have similar approaches to
placing things in memory, and so now have similar implementations.
2021-09-16 17:02:19 -07:00
Andy McFadden
345dff7765 Clone 20152-local-variables
Generate a 6502 test from the 65816 version by substituting the
16-bit instructions with 8-bit no-ops.  There's a lot of project
edits and weird stuff in the test, so this was much easier than
starting over.

The 65816 variant is largely unchanged, though it could now be
stripped down to the stack-offset instructions.
2020-10-19 17:14:56 -07:00