helloworld
0x01-ARM-32-Hacking-Hello-World
helloworld | 0x01-ARM-32-Hacking-Hello-World | |
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4 | 2 | |
20 | 12 | |
- | - | |
3.4 | 0.0 | |
10 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Assembly | Assembly | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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helloworld
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Hjalfi writes Hello World for CP/M seven times[ASM,C,Fortran,COBOL,BASIC,Forth] [video]
If you're interested in that sort of thing, I wrote Hello World using 6 different methods in Assembler for Raspberry Pi. Even if not using a Raspberry Pi, it might be of interest to anyone that wants to understand what the difference is between the various clib methods, (puts, write, etc.).
https://github.com/ksaj/helloworld
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Ask HN: Has anyone used assembly recently?
Here is something I did that your son might be interested in. It is simply Hello World, but done 6 different ways using ARM assembly language.
https://github.com/ksaj/helloworld
I did a lot of Assembly language programming in the 90's, on Intel, but I haven't really since then. Still a fan of it though.
- 6 Different Ways to Print Hello World in Assembler on a Raspberry Pi
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Assembler on Raspberry Pi
I did some experimenting with RPi assembler, since I used to do a lot of x86 assembler throughout the 90's. If you're interested, here are 6 completely different ways to print Hello World in Assembler for the Raspberry Pi.
https://github.com/ksaj/helloworld
I kept the code as close to each other in format and style as possible, so comparisons are easier to make. I don't really know the benefits and drawbacks to each method, but they are there and available, so I sleuthed them out and got them working.
0x01-ARM-32-Hacking-Hello-World
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