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General Discussion Board \ Calculator Discussion \ Using TASM

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AuthorComment
me2
Goliath
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Posted: 2 May 2007
12:32 GMT
Total Posts: 171
How do I use TASM to compile Something in assembly?

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<--- Going out with a bang.
tifreak8x
Administrator
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Posted: 2 May 2007
12:42 GMT
Total Posts: 419
You would be better off using Latenite to Edit and compile your projects.

Latenite Folder

I belive you will need .NET libraries, not really sure though. Just look through included documentation in the zip file...

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Bringing you Pokemon, for your calculator.
threefingeredguy
Ghost
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Posted: 2 May 2007
14:28 GMT
Total Posts: 1189
You'd be worse off using Latenite. It sucks. Use the newly released Spasmwabbit, all in a single program now. Just write your code and call spasmwabbit for the fastest assembling and best macro system out there.

Edit: It's actually called wabbitspasm, and here's a link: Click

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Someone call for an exterminator?
tifreak8x
Administrator
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Posted: 4 May 2007
12:19 GMT
Total Posts: 419
Ah, I wasn't overly aware of wabbitspasm, I might give that one a try. :)

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Bringing you Pokemon, for your calculator.
haveacalc
Guardian
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Posted: 4 May 2007
16:02 GMT
Total Posts: 1111
Opcodes are still doing me well. The only annoying part is the debugging...

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-quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do).
haveacalc
Guardian
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Posted: 5 May 2007
19:20 GMT
Total Posts: 1111
Hoorah! I've solidly memorized the first 256 of 'em. Those are the most commonly used ones...

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-quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do).
Barrett
Administrator
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Posted: 5 May 2007
20:22 GMT
Total Posts: 1676
what's the 152nd?

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-Barrett A
haveacalc
Guardian
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Posted: 5 May 2007
20:29 GMT
Total Posts: 1111
From memory...152d=98h...subc b.

This has pretty much confirmed that I'm not getting an Nspire, since there's no way that I'd want to memorize opcodes for two different processors.

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-quoted directly from most movies that don't exist (and some that do).





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