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867 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
867 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
XASM (1)
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========
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:doctype: manpage
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NAME
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----
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xasm - 6502 cross-assembler
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SYNOPSIS
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--------
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*xasm* '[OPTIONS] SOURCE_FILE'
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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*xasm* is a cross-assembler for the 6502 family processors.
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'SOURCE_FILE' is the name of the source file
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(you may omit the default `.asx` extension).
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When invoked without any options, *xasm* assembles 'SOURCE_FILE'
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and writes the result to an object file named 'SOURCE_FILE'
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with the extension changed to `.obx`.
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OPTIONS
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-------
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*/c*::
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Specifies that lines skipped due to a false condition
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should be included in the listing file.
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[[new_deflabel]]*/d:*'LABEL'='VALUE'::
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Defines a label.
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'LABEL' should be a valid label name.
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'VALUE' may be any expression (may reference to labels defined in source files).
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You may use several */d* options to define many labels from the command line.
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*/i*::
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Excludes included files from the listing file.
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*/l*'[:LISTING_FILE]'::
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Generates listing file.
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If 'LISTING_FILE' is omitted, the listing filename
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is 'SOURCE_FILE' with the extension changed to `.lst`.
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[[new_makefile]]*/M*::
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Prints a rule for use in a `Makefile`.
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First line of the rule lists 'OBJECT_FILE' as the target of the rule
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and all source files (including the ones specified by `icl` and `ins` directives)
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as dependencies. The second line contains the command line with `OBJECT_FILE`
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replaced by the *make* macro `$@` and `SOURCE_FILE` replaced by the macro `$<`.
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Dollars in the command line are doubled.
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Your `make` or shell may require more escaping.
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*/o*':OBJECT_FILE'::
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Sets output file name.
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The default is 'SOURCE_FILE' with the extension changed to `.obx`.
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[[new_fullpaths]]*/p*::
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Prints absolute paths in listing and error messages.
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[[new_quiet]]*/q*::
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Quiet mode. Prevents *xasm* from printing the logo and the summary.
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*/t*'[:LABEL_FILE]'::
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Generates label table.
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If 'LABEL_FILE' is omitted then the table is appended to the listing.
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[[new_unlabels]]*/u*::
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Issues a warning message for each label whose value is unused.
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Alternatively, you may use Unix-style options, for example:
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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xasm -i -d DEBUG=1 -l listing.lst source.asx
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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SYNTAX
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------
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Source files should be plain ASCII files.
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LF, CR, CR/LF and Atari ($9b) line terminators are supported.
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Labels and instructions are case-insensitive.
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*xasm* is backward compatible with Quick Assembler.
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To compile QA sources with *xasm*, simply replace ATASCII-specific characters
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with their integer codes. You also have to update all `OPT` directives,
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but usually you can simply remove them.
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'Label' is a symbol that represents a signed 32-bit integer.
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You define a label by putting its name at the beginning of a line
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(with no spaces before).
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The label will be assigned the current value of the 'origin counter'
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(i.e. the address of the compiled instruction),
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unless you use it with the `EQU` directive where it is assigned
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the value of the argument.
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Instructions and directives must be preceded with some whitespace.
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Without leading whitespace they are treated as label names.
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For example:
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----
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nop
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----
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is a 6502 instruction, whereas
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----
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nop
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----
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defines a label called `nop`.
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Whole-line comments must start with a semicolon, an asterisk or a pipe,
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with optional label definition and spaces before.
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Here are examples of whole-line comments:
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--------------------
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; this is a comment
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* so it is
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label | and this too
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--------------------
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[[new_linerep]]
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Lines with instructions (and selected directives) may be 'repeated'.
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To assemble a single line several times,
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precede the repeat count with a colon, for example:
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-----------------
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:4 asl @
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table :32*5 dta 5
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-----------------
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In lines with instructions or directives, a comment starts immediately
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after the instruction/directive has been successfully parsed.
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That is, in these lines *xasm* does not require a special character
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to start a comment.
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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lda foo ; this is a comment
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sta bar this too
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tax #0 tax has no operand, therefore #0 starts this comment
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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[[new_pairing]]
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You may put two instructions in one line so they share the operand.
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For example:
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------------
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eor:sta foo
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------------
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is equivalent to
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------------
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eor foo
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sta foo
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------------
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Note that
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------------
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lda:tax #0
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------------
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is allowed because `#0` is treated as a comment for `tax`.
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EXPRESSIONS
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-----------
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Expressions are numbers combined with operators and brackets.
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You should use square brackets, because parentheses are reserved
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for 6502 indirect addressing.
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A number is:
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- a 32-bit decimal integer, e.g. `-12345`
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- a 32-bit hexadecimal integer, e.g. `$abcd`
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- a 32-bit binary integer, e.g. `%10100101`
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- an ASCII character, e.g. `'a'` or `"a"`
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- origin counter: `*`
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- a hardware register (see below), e.g. `^4e`
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- [[new_opcode]]an opcode (see below), e.g. `{lda #0}` is `$a9`
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- [[new_linecnt]]the line repeat counter (see below): `#`
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Abbreviations of Atari hardware registers are provided
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to save two characters (`$d40e` vs `^4e`)
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and to facilitate porting software between Atari 8-bit computers
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and the Atari 5200 console.
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These are very similar machines, one of the biggest differences
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is the location of hardware registers.
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[cols="^m,^d,^m,^d",options="header"]
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|================================================
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|Syntax|Chip |Value|Value in Atari 5200 mode (`opt g+`)
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| ^0x |GTIA |$D00x|`$C00x`
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| ^1x |GTIA |$D01x|`$C01x`
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| ^2x |POKEY|$D20x|`$E80x`
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| ^3x |PIA |$D30x|'error (there's no PIA chip)'
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| ^4x |ANTIC|$D40x|`$D40x`
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|================================================
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The opcode syntax represents the opcode byte of the instruction inside braces.
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The operand of the instruction is discarded and is needed only to recognize
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the addressing mode. The instruction should begin right after the left brace
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and the right brace should immediately follow the operand 'or' the instruction.
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[[new_op_op]]You can skip the operand if the addressing mode is fixed.
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Examples: `{lda #}`, `{jsr}`, `{bne}`, `{jmp ()}`, `{sta a:,x}`.
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You can use the line repeat counter (`#`) in the repeated lines.
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It counts the iterations starting from zero. Examples:
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----------------------------------------------------
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:3 dta # ; generates three bytes: 0, 1, 2.
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line_lo :192 dta l(screen+40*#)
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line_hi :192 dta h(screen+40*#)
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dl :59 dta $4f,a(screen+40*#),0,$4f,a(screen+40*#),0
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----------------------------------------------------
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The following 'binary operators' are supported:
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- `+` Addition
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- `-` Subtraction
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- `*` Multiplication
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- `/` Division
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- `%` Remainder
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- `&` Bitwise AND
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- `|` Bitwise OR
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- `^` Bitwise XOR
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- `<<` Arithmetic shift left
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- `>>` Arithmetic shift right
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- `==` Equal
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- `=` Equal (same as `==`)
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- `!=` Not equal
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- `<>` Not equal (same as `!=`)
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- `<` Less than
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- `>` Greater than
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- `<=` Less or equal
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- `>=` Greater or equal
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- `&&` Logical AND
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- `||` Logical OR
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[[new_unary]]
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The following 'unary operators' are supported:
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- `+` Plus (does nothing)
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- `-` Minus (changes the sign)
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- `~` Bitwise NOT (complements all bits)
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- `!` Logical NOT (changes true to false and vice versa)
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- `<` Low (extracts the low byte)
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- `>` High (extracts the high byte)
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The operator precedence is following:
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- first: `[]` (brackets)
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- `+ - ~ < >` (unary)
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- `* / % & << >>` (binary)
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- `+ - | ^` (binary)
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- `= == <> != < > <= >=` (binary)
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- `!` (unary)
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- `&&` (binary)
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- last: `||` (binary)
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Although the operators are similar to those used in C, C++ and Java,
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their priorities are different than in these languages.
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Compare and logical operators assume that zero is false and a non-zero
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is true. They return 1 for true.
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Expressions are calculated in signed 32-bit arithmetic.
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"Arithmetic overflow" error signals overflow of the 32-bit range.
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DIRECTIVES
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----------
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*EQU* - assign value of expression to label::
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Examples:
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+
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----------
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five equ 5
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here equ *
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----------
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[[new_opt]]*OPT* - set assembler options::
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Five options are available:
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- `F` - fill the space between memory areas with `$FF`
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- `G` - Atari 5200 mode for hardware register abbreviations
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- `H` - generate Atari executable headers
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- `L` - write to the listing
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- `O` - write to the object file
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- `U` - warn of unused labels
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+
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You can turn any of these on or off.
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The default (if no `OPT` specified) is `opt f-g-h+l+o+u+`.
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Examples:
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+
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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opt l- listing off
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opt l+o- listing on, object file off
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opt f+g+h- useful for Atari 5200 cartridges - raw output, 5200 hw regs
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*ORG* - change value of the origin counter::
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If Atari executable headers are enabled, you can include an operand prefix:
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- `a:` starts a new block even if it's superfluous
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because the new address equals the current address.
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- `f:` is same as `a:`, but additionally generates a double-`$FF` prefix
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before the new header. This prefix is automatically generated
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at the beginning of the file (no need to include `f:` in the first `ORG`).
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+
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Examples:
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+
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---------------
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org $600
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org f:$700
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table org *+100
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---------------
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+
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In the latter example `table` points to 100 bytes
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of uninitialized data (label is assigned with `*`
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before the `ORG` directive is executed).
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+
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[[new_orgr]]Starting with version 2.6.0, *xasm* supports code
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that is relocated in the memory at runtime. Let's say you want your code
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to be located on page zero. You can't normally load it directly into this
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place, so you load it at a different address and then move in your program.
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`org r:` changes the address that it used for code generation
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but not the address used for generating Atari executable headers.
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Example:
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+
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--------------------------------------
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org $8000
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ldx #code_length-1
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mva:rpl code_loaded,x z:code_zpage,x-
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jmp code_zpage
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code_loaded
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org r:$30
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code_zpage
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jmp * ; ... or something more sensible
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code_length equ *-code_zpage
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--------------------------------------
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+
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Note that both `*` and label definitions use the counter used
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for code generation. There is no direct access to the other counter,
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because I think this is not useful. If you really need it, you can
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always type something like:
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+
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---------------------------------------
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where_am_i equ *-code_zpage+code_loaded
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---------------------------------------
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[[new_dta]]*DTA* - define data::
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- integers
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+
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--
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* bytes: `b(200)` or simply `200`
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* words: `a(10000)`
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* low bytes of words: `l(511)` (byte 255)
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* high bytes of words: `h(511)` (byte 1)
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You may enter many expressions in parentheses and combine different types
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of data in single line, separating things with commas.
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You may also define a sine lookup table. The syntax is:
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-------------------------------
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sin(center,amp,size,first,last)
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-------------------------------
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where:
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* `center` is an integer which is added to every sine value
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* `amp` is the sine amplitude
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* `size` is the sine period
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* `first,last` define the range of sine arguments.
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They are optional. The default are `0,size-1`.
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Example:
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----------------------------
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dta a(sin(0,1000,256,0,63))
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----------------------------
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defines a table of 64 words representing a quarter of sine with the amplitude of 1000.
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--
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- real numbers: `r(-1.23456e12)`
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+
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Real numbers are stored in the 6-byte Atari Floating-Point format.
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- text strings
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+
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--
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* ASCII strings: `c'Text'` or `c"Text"`
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* ANTIC strings: `d'Text'` or `d"Text"`
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A character string consists of any number of characters surrounded by quotation
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marks. You can include the quotation marks in the string by doubling them.
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Placing a `*` character after a string inverts
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the highest bit in every byte of the string.
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--
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+
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Examples of `DTA`:
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+
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------------------------------------------------
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dta b(1,2),3,a(1000,-1),l(12345,sin(0,127,256))
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dta d"ANTIC"*,c'It''s a string',$9b
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------------------------------------------------
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*ICL* - include another source file::
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Specifies another file to be included in the assembly as if the contents
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of the referenced file appeared in place of the `ICL` statement.
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The included file may contain other `ICL` statements.
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The `.asx` extension is added if none given.
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Examples:
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+
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-----------------
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icl 'macros.asx'
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icl 'lib/fileio'
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-----------------
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+
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NOTE: for portability, use only relative paths and slash as the separator.
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This way your sources will compile under Windows and Linux.
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*END* - end assembling file::
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May be used if the source file ends with something which shouldn't
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be read by *xasm* (e.g. your notes). At the end of file it's optional.
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*INS* - insert contents of file::
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Copies every byte of the specified file into the object file and updates
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the origin counter, as if these bytes were defined with `DTA`.
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You may specify a range of the file to insert. The syntax is:
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+
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-----------------------------
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ins 'file'[,offset[,length]]
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-----------------------------
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+
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The first byte in a file has the offset of zero.
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If the offset is negative, it counts from the end of the file.
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Examples:
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+
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-----------------------------------------------
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ins 'picture.raw'
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ins 'file',-256 insert last 256 bytes of file
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ins 'file',10,10 insert bytes 10..19 of file
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-----------------------------------------------
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*RUN* - set run address in the Atari executable format::
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+
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---------
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run main
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---------
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+
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is equivalent to:
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+
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------------
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org $2e0
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dta a(main)
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------------
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*INI* - set init address in the Atari executable format::
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Example:
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+
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------------
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ini showpic
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------------
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*ERT* - generate error if expression evaluates to true::
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Examples:
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+
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-----------------------
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ert *>$c000
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ert len1>$ff||len2>$ff
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-----------------------
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[[new_eli]]*IFT* - assemble if expression is true::
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*ELI* - else if::
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*ELS* - else::
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*EIF* - end if::
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With these directives you can construct fragments which
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are assembled only when a condition is met.
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Conditional constructions can be nested.
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Example:
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+
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-------------
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noscr equ 1
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widescr equ 1
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ift noscr
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lda #0
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eli widescr
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lda #$23
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els
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lda #$22
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eif
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sta $22f
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-------------
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+
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NOTE: the above example may be rewritten using the 'repeat line' feature:
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+
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--------------------------
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noscr equ 1
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widescr equ 1
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:noscr lda #0
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:!noscr&&widescr lda #$23
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:!noscr&&!widescr lda #$22
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sta $22f
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--------------------------
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PSEUDO COMMANDS
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---------------
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'Pseudo commands' are built-in macros. There are no user-defined macros in *xasm*.
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*ADD* - addition without carry::
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If you have ever programmed a 6502, you must have noticed that you had
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to use a `CLC` before `ADC` for every simple addition.
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+
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*xasm* can do it for you. `ADD` replaces two instructions: `CLC` and `ADC`.
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*SUB* - subtraction::
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It is `SEC` and `SBC`.
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[[new_repskip]]*RCC, RCS, REQ, RMI, RNE, RPL, RVC, RVS* - conditional repeat::
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|
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These are branches to the previous instruction.
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They take no operand, because the branch target is the address
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of the previously assembled instruction or pseudo command.
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Example:
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+
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-----------------------
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ldx #0
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mva:rne $500,x $600,x+
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-----------------------
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+
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The above code copies a 256-byte memory block from $500 to $600.
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Here is the same written with standard 6502 commands only:
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+
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--------------------
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ldx #0
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copy_loop lda $500,x
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sta $600,x
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inx
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bne copy_loop
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--------------------
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*SCC, SCS, SEQ, SMI, SNE, SPL, SVC, SVS* - conditional skip::
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|
|
These are branches over the next instruction. No operand is required,
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because the target is the address of the instruction following
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the next instruction.
|
|
Example:
|
|
+
|
|
--------------
|
|
lda #40
|
|
add:sta ptr
|
|
scc:inc ptr+1
|
|
--------------
|
|
+
|
|
In the above example the 16-bit variable `ptr` is incremented by 40.
|
|
|
|
*JCC, JCS, JEQ, JMI, JNE, JPL, JVC, JVS* - conditional jumps::
|
|
|
|
These are long branches. While standard branches (such as `BNE`)
|
|
have range of -128..+127, these jumps have range of 64 kB.
|
|
For example:
|
|
+
|
|
---------
|
|
jne dest
|
|
---------
|
|
+
|
|
is equivalent to:
|
|
+
|
|
-------------
|
|
seq:jmp dest
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
*INW* - increment word::
|
|
|
|
Increments a 16-bit word in the memory.
|
|
Example:
|
|
+
|
|
---------
|
|
inw dest
|
|
---------
|
|
+
|
|
is equivalent to:
|
|
+
|
|
---------------
|
|
inc dest
|
|
sne:inc dest+1
|
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
*MVA, MVX, MVY* - move byte using accumulator, X or Y::
|
|
|
|
Each of these pseudo commands requires two operands
|
|
and substitutes two commands:
|
|
+
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
mva source dest = lda source : sta dest
|
|
mvx source dest = ldx source : stx dest
|
|
mvy source dest = ldy source : sty dest
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[[new_mwinde]]*MWA, MWX, MWY* - move word using accumulator, X or Y::
|
|
|
|
These pseudo commands require two operands and are combinations of two `MV*`'s:
|
|
one to move the low byte, and the other to move the high byte.
|
|
You can't use indirect nor pseudo addressing mode with `MW*`.
|
|
Destination must be an absolute address, optionally indexed.
|
|
When source is also an absolute address, an `mw* source dest` expands to:
|
|
+
|
|
--------------------
|
|
mv* source dest
|
|
mv* source+1 dest+1
|
|
--------------------
|
|
+
|
|
When source is an immediate value, an `mw* #immed dest` expands to:
|
|
+
|
|
------------------
|
|
mv* <immed dest
|
|
mv* >immed dest+1
|
|
------------------
|
|
+
|
|
When `<immed` equals `>immed` and `immed` is not forward-referenced,
|
|
*xasm* skips the second `LD*`:
|
|
+
|
|
----------------
|
|
mv* <immed dest
|
|
st* dest+1
|
|
----------------
|
|
+
|
|
If possible, `MWX` and `MWY` use increment/decrement commands.
|
|
For example, `mwx #1 dest` expands to:
|
|
+
|
|
-----------
|
|
ldx #1
|
|
stx dest
|
|
dex
|
|
stx dest+1
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
ADDRESSING MODES
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
All addressing modes are entered in the standard 6502 convention
|
|
except for the accumulator addressing mode,
|
|
which should be marked with the `@` character (as in Quick Assembler).
|
|
|
|
For Quick Assembler compatibility, there are two extra immediate
|
|
addressing modes: `<` and `>`, which use the low/high byte of a 16-bit word constant.
|
|
Unlike in Quick Assembler, you can alternatively use
|
|
the more common syntax: `#<` and `#>`.
|
|
Note the difference:
|
|
-------------------------------
|
|
lda >$ff+5 ; loads 1 (>$104)
|
|
lda #>$ff+5 ; loads 5 (0+5)
|
|
-------------------------------
|
|
|
|
You can explicitly specify absolute (`a:`) and zero-page (`z:`) addressing modes.
|
|
|
|
Examples:
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
nop
|
|
asl @
|
|
lda >$1234 assembles to lda #$12
|
|
lda $100,x
|
|
lda 0 zero-page (8-bit address)
|
|
lda a:0 absolute (16-bit address)
|
|
jmp ($0a)
|
|
lda ($80),y
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[[new_adrmodes]]
|
|
There are 'pseudo addressing modes', which are similar to pseudo commands.
|
|
You may use them just like standard addressing modes in all 6502 commands
|
|
and pseudo commands, except for `MWA`, `MWX` and `MWY`:
|
|
------------------------------------------
|
|
cmd a,x+ = cmd a,x : inx
|
|
cmd a,x- = cmd a,x : dex
|
|
cmd a,y+ = cmd a,y : iny
|
|
cmd a,y- = cmd a,y : dey
|
|
cmd (z),y+ = cmd (z),y : iny
|
|
cmd (z),y- = cmd (z),y : dey
|
|
cmd (z,0) = ldx #0 : cmd (z,x)
|
|
cmd (z),0 = ldy #0 : cmd (z),y
|
|
cmd (z),0+ = ldy #0 : cmd (z),y : iny
|
|
cmd (z),0- = ldy #0 : cmd (z),y : dey
|
|
------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
HISTORY
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
Version 3.0.2 (2009-10-17)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed "Branch out of range" error message - was overstated by 256 bytes
|
|
for backward branches
|
|
- <<new_makefile,new command-line option */M* prints Makefile rule>>
|
|
- command-line options are now case-insensitive
|
|
- on Windows error messages are printed in red, warnings in yellow
|
|
|
|
Version 3.0.1 (2007-04-22)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed a bug in `OPT H-` mode
|
|
- made *xasm* compilable with the latest D compiler v1.010
|
|
(there were incompatible changes in the D language and library)
|
|
|
|
Version 3.0.0 (2005-05-22)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- rewritten from the x86 assembly language to the
|
|
http://www.digitalmars.com/d[D programming language] - Linux version
|
|
is now available and DOS is no longer supported
|
|
- no limits for line length, number of `ICLs`, `ORGs`,`IFTs` and labels
|
|
- Unix-style command-line options are supported
|
|
- */e* option is no longer supported
|
|
- the label table is now sorted alphabetically
|
|
|
|
Version 2.6.1 (2005-05-21)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- no more "Arithmetic overflow" and "Division by zero" errors for correct
|
|
use of forward-referenced labels (bug found by Marcin Lewandowski)
|
|
- an error was reported in the following correct code:
|
|
+
|
|
---------
|
|
ift 0
|
|
foo equ 1
|
|
ift foo
|
|
eif
|
|
eif
|
|
---------
|
|
+
|
|
(bug found by Adrian Matoga)
|
|
|
|
- errors for non-existing `INC @` and `DEC @`
|
|
- negative numbers fixed in the listing
|
|
|
|
Version 2.6.0 (2005-02-07)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- long file names are supported under Windows
|
|
- <<new_orgr,support for code relocated at runtime>>
|
|
- <<new_linecnt,line repeat counter>>
|
|
- label values are now 32-bit, not just 17-bit
|
|
- command-line options */n* and */s* are no longer supported
|
|
- fatal I/O errors (such as floppy not ready) no longer print the annoying
|
|
"Abort, Retry, Ignore" message
|
|
|
|
Version 2.5.2 (2002-10-03)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- version 2.5.1 broke Unix EOLs - fixed
|
|
- version 2.5.1 omitted all blank/comment/label lines, unless */c* was used
|
|
|
|
Version 2.5.1 (2002-08-21)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed assembling sources with Atari EOLs
|
|
- blank/comment/label lines in false conditionals are now correctly omitted
|
|
in listing
|
|
|
|
Version 2.5 (2002-07-08)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed another bug, very similar to the previous one, e.g.
|
|
+
|
|
----------
|
|
ift 0
|
|
:label nop
|
|
eif
|
|
----------
|
|
+
|
|
reported "Label not defined before" error for the repeat count
|
|
|
|
- <<new_opt,`OPT F+` causes `ORG` to fill the space
|
|
between the old and the new location with `$FFs`>>
|
|
- <<new_opt,`OPT G+` enables Atari 5200 mode for hardware
|
|
register abbreviations>>
|
|
|
|
Version 2.4.1 (2002-06-27)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed a bug related to label definitions in conditionally skipped code,
|
|
e.g.
|
|
+
|
|
----------
|
|
ift 0
|
|
label
|
|
eif
|
|
----------
|
|
+
|
|
reported "No ORG specified" error for the label definition
|
|
|
|
Version 2.4 (2002-05-22)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed incorrect unary operator precedence
|
|
- fixed wrong label value after a skip pseudo command
|
|
- the assembler is .EXE (.COM caused problems with DJGPP *make* due
|
|
to a bug in the DJGPP runtime)
|
|
- the assembler executable is not compressed (so it occupies less space in the ZIP)
|
|
- improved command-line parsing: options may be used before source file name,
|
|
tab character is a valid separator, slash may be used as a directory separator
|
|
- error and warning messages are written to stderr, not stdout
|
|
- added `==` (equals) operator, which is equivalent to `=`,
|
|
but more natural for C/C++/Java programmers
|
|
- <<new_deflabel,added `/d:label=value` option: define a label>>
|
|
- <<new_fullpaths,added `/p` option: print full paths
|
|
in listing and error messages>>
|
|
- <<new_quiet,added `/q` option: quiet mode>>
|
|
- <<new_unlabels,added `/u` option: warn of unused labels>>
|
|
- <<new_opt,writing to the object file may be suppressed with `OPT O-`>>
|
|
- <<new_eli,added `ELI` (else if) directive>>
|
|
- <<new_mwinde,`MWX` and `MWY` may use `INX`/`DEX` and `INY`/`DEY`,
|
|
respectively, for generating shorter code>>
|
|
|
|
Version 2.3 (2002-02-10)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed double skip (e.g. `SCC:SNE`)
|
|
- fixed real numbers with two-digit exponent
|
|
- trailing spaces are trimmed from listing lines
|
|
- label definitions allowed in blank, comment and repeated lines
|
|
- <<new_unary,unary operators>>
|
|
- <<new_dta,`DTA` implied byte mode>>
|
|
- <<new_op_op,operand can be skipped for some opcodes>>
|
|
|
|
Version 2.2 (1999-09-10)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed invalid opcodes of absolute `CPX` and `CPY`
|
|
- fixed: addressing mode not checked for branch commands
|
|
- fixed `ICL` in last line
|
|
- fixed `OPT H-H+`
|
|
- fixed first `ORG *`
|
|
- no need to set origin counter until it's used
|
|
- allow Unix, Macintosh and Atari EOLs
|
|
- value of 'true' changed to 1
|
|
- command-line option to set environment variables on error
|
|
- commane-line option to assemble only if source is newer than object file
|
|
- <<new_opcode,opcode extracting>>
|
|
- <<new_linerep,repeat line>>
|
|
- <<new_pairing,two instructions in line>>
|
|
- <<new_repskip,conditional repeat and skip pseudo commands>>
|
|
- <<new_adrmodes,`(),0+` and `(),0-` pseudo addressing modes>>
|
|
|
|
Version 2.0 (1998-11-12)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- fixed: name of object file was truncated
|
|
- fixed forward references in `EQU` and `DTA`
|
|
- fixed hex numbers
|
|
- `.OBX` is now the default extension for the object file
|
|
- options (command-line switches and `OPT`)
|
|
- listing
|
|
- label table
|
|
- conditional assembly
|
|
- user errors (`ERT`)
|
|
- warnings
|
|
- 6 new pseudo commands (memory-to-memory move)
|
|
- 8 pseudo addressing modes
|
|
- indirect conditional jumps
|
|
- Atari floating-point numbers
|
|
- object file headers optimization
|
|
- improved expressions - 19 operators and brackets, 32-bit arithmetic
|
|
- improved signed numbers
|
|
- improved `INS`: inserting specified part of file
|
|
|
|
Version 1.2 (1998-08-14)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
- first release
|
|
|
|
AUTHOR
|
|
------
|
|
Piotr Fusik <fox@scene.pl>
|
|
|
|
SEE ALSO
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
Website: http://xasm.atari.org[]
|