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- assembly - What are the ESP and the EBP registers . . . - Stack Overflow
Understanding the stack is very crucial in programming in assembly language as this can affect the calling conventions you will be using regardless of the type For example, even the cdecl or __stdcall is also dependent on the ESP and EBP registers, and others too in some way depend on some registers and the stack
- assembly - Purpose of ESI EDI registers? - Stack Overflow
What is the actual purpose and use of the EDI amp; ESI registers in assembler? I know they are used for string operations for one thing Can someone also give an example?
- What does the dollar sign ($) mean in x86 assembly when calculating . . .
What does the dollar sign ($) mean in x86 assembly when calculating string lengths like "$ - label"? [duplicate] Asked 13 years, 2 months ago Modified 7 years, 8 months ago Viewed 76k times
- x86 - Assembly - JG JNLE JL JNGE after CMP - Stack Overflow
Assembly - JG JNLE JL JNGE after CMP Asked 13 years, 4 months ago Modified 1 year, 7 months ago Viewed 194k times
- What do the dollar ($) and percentage (%) signs represent in x86 assembly?
I am trying to understand how the assembly language works for a micro-computer architecture class, and I keep facing different syntaxes in examples: sub $48, %esp mov %eax, 32(%esp) What do these
- terminology - Assembly vs. Assembler - Stack Overflow
The assembly is a piece of code executable that is in machine executable code This might be an obj, exe, dll, It is the result of a compile The assembler is the "compiler" that compiles code into machine executable code This code has been written in the language " Assembly Language " Assembly language in common English is often called Assembler Assemblator seems to be a creative word
- x86 - What does ORG Assembly Instruction do? - Stack Overflow
can anyone give me a comprehensive description about ORG directive? When and why is it used in assembly written applications? Using Nasm on x86 or AMD64
- What does the and instruction do to the operands in assembly language?
What does the 'and' instruction do in assembly language? I was told that it checks the bit order of the operands and sets the 1s to true and anything else to false, but I don't know what it actually does or what effect it has on the code
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