[A89] Re: Anybody Alive?


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[A89] Re: Anybody Alive?



>I don't need compilers... I compile my own code into hex by hand!
lol - are you serious about that?
Before I had access to a computer other than the one in our high school library, me, and one of my friends would literally write z80 asm code out for the ti-86 on paper... then we'd compute and type them in op code by op code into the calculator. Never did figure out how to write out an jr or jp without causing the loss of a days worth of typing... its the typos that kill you :/

Regards,
Greg Dietsche
GForce Programming:   http://calc.gregd.org
Detached Solutions:      http://www.detachedsolutions.com

----- Original Message ----- 

  From: Duncan Smith 
  To: assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org 
  Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2002 8:55 PM
  Subject: [A89] Re: Anybody Alive?



  I was looking for that alh page!  Thanks! (I thought it was
  at alh.dhs.org, its old address)

  I also recommend the motorola processor docs... they are
  especially if you use exec-codes, like me... they give the
  bitpatterns of EVERYTHING, condition codes, etc., which
  is a BIG help in this kind of situation.

  That's a pretty nice site you got there, Greg!  I'm still
  awaiting commandpost.  I like the KerNO a lot.  Thanks for
  your work!

  I'm migrating from 68k asm to Saturn (HP) asm.  4bit instructions and
  64bit dataregisters... mmm....  Saturn is optimized for graphing
  calculator operation, obviously.  Actually, I'm learning RPL (look
  it up on Google for more info).

  ____________________________________________________________________
  I don't need compilers... I compile my own code into hex by hand!

  -Duncan (slimey_limey on ticalc)

  >From: "Greg" <Gregory.Dietsche@cuw.edu>
  >Subject: [A89] Re: Anybody Alive?
  >Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2002 18:47:54 -0600
  >
  >next we have ALH's page: http://www.ti89hardware.tk/
  >see the section called PDF DOCUMENTS download those pdf files... they will 
  >answer your questions about the size of each instruction, and the number of 
  >clock cycles required.
  >
  ...
  >awhile ago, i started to put together an 68k asm reference. Its not 
  >complete, but it has a few good links: http://calc.gregd.org/68k/
  >


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