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| Introduction to 80 x 86 Assembly Language and Computer Architecture - no CD - help I recently bought this book online used, it came with no CD. Many of the code examples in this book rely on some file called IO.h that apparently came with the CD. I downloaded this file and I still get many errors. Does anyone have these files, or do I even need them? Can I just learn assembly without even assembling files? Here is what the program looks like, I cant even assemble it because I dont have IO.h, kind of stupid that this book relies on some header file rather than showing you how to do it without header files though ; Example assembly language program -- adds two numbers ; Author: R. Detmer ; Date: revised 7/97 .386 .MODEL FLAT ExitProcess PROTO NEAR32 stdcall, dwExitCode:DWORD INCLUDE io.h ; header file for input/output cr EQU 0dh ; carriage return character Lf EQU 0ah ; line feed .STACK 4096 ; reserve 4096-byte stack .DATA ; reserve storage for data number1 DWORD ? number2 DWORD ? prompt1 BYTE "Enter first number: ", 0 prompt2 BYTE "Enter second number: ", 0 string BYTE 40 DUP (?) label1 BYTE cr, Lf, "The sum is " sum BYTE 11 DUP (?) BYTE cr, Lf, 0 .CODE ; start of main program code _start: output prompt1 ; prompt for first number input string, 40 ; read ASCII characters atod string ; convert to integer mov number1, eax ; store in memory output prompt2 ; repeat for second number input string, 40 atod string mov number2, eax mov eax, number1 ; first number to EAX add eax, number2 ; add second number dtoa sum, eax ; convert to ASCII characters output label1 ; output label and sum INVOKE ExitProcess, 0 ; exit with return code 0 PUBLIC _start ; make entry point public |
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| Re: Introduction to 80 x 86 Assembly Language and Computer Architecture - no CD - hel Well, you can assemble your code in memory and run it from there...a perfect place to start for small DOS programs...you probably already have the tool (Debug), just need the tutorial: http://www.datainstitute.com/debug1.htm The IO.H file that your book wants is just assembly code for handling the input/output functions so you wont have to code this yourself. Actually, the book is doing you a disservice because you really should learn to code these yourself and this isn't difficult to learn. Check out Ralph Brown's Interupt List at: http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.e...ralf-home.html You will eventually discover that a lot of asmers have given up DOS in favor of Windows programming (which isn't that difficult to learn) and there are plenty of assemblers and resources available for this. Check out the links in the following thread: http://www.daniweb.com/techtalkforums/thread22522.html Happy asming! |
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