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  1. What does the 'and' instruction do to the operands in assembly …

    Dec 4, 2018 · 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 …

  2. Assembly Programming - Reddit

    This is a subreddit for people who need help with programming in assembly and people who want to post their own code to help others out.

  3. terminology - "Assembly" vs. "Assembler" - Stack Overflow

    May 26, 2023 · 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 …

  4. Is it worth it to learn assembly? : r/learnprogramming - Reddit

    Understanding assembly can help you interpret low-level performance metrics and find issues in your code more efficiently. Assembly language helps in facilitating algorithm optimization. It can be …

  5. People who program on Assembly, what is it like? : r ... - Reddit

    Assembly language is like trying to use repetitive addition instead of multiplication when your task is to compute exponentiation and logarithms. If your math skills are excellent and you pull identity …

  6. What do the dollar ($) and percentage (%) signs represent in x86 …

    Sep 28, 2018 · 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, …

  7. How to use Assembly on windows ? : r/Assembly_language - Reddit

    Sep 26, 2023 · How to use Assembly on windows ? Hello everyone I want to code in Assembly, but I can't find compilers to run the programs.All I can work on is the MASM in Visual Studio, but people …

  8. Newest 'assembly' Questions - Stack Overflow

    My assembly program reads characters in a text file by loading them one by one in register 'al'. However I sometime need to use rax fully, and I think this causes a partial register stall.

  9. /r/asm - where every byte counts - Reddit

    Welcome to `r/asm`, the subreddit for Assembly language in all Instruction Set Architectures!

  10. How do you engineers professionally abbreviate the word, "Assembly ...

    It's either assy or assembly, never saw it any other way until GA level. Sub assy or sub-assy commonly used. Reply reply cuco33 • Depends on the company but I have seen ASM and ASSY Reply reply …