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Assembly.Language.Step-by-Step.Programming.with.DOS.and.Linux.Second.Edition.chm
Assembly Language Step-by-Step—Programming with DOS and Linux, Second Edition
Foreword
Introduction - "Why Would You Want to Do That?"
Chapter 1 - Another Pleasant Valley Saturday Understanding What Computers Really Do
Chapter 2 - Alien Bases Getting Your Arms around Binary and Hexadecimal
Chapter 3 - Lifting the Hood Discovering What Computers Actually Are
Chapter 4 - The Right to Assemble The Process of Making Assembly Language Programs
Chapter 5 - NASM-IDE: A Place to Stand Give me a lever long enough, and a place to stand, and I will move the Earth.
Chapter 6 - An Uneasy Alliance The x86 CPU and Its Segmented Memory System
Chapter 7 - Following Your Instructions Meeting Machine Instructions up Close and Personal
Chapter 8 - Our Object All Sublime Creating Programs that Work
Chapter 9 - Dividing and Conquering Using Procedures and Macros to Battle Complexity
Chapter 10 - Bits, Flags, Branches, and Tables Easing into Mainstream Assembly Programming
Chapter 11 - Stringing Them Up Those Amazing String Instructions
Chapter 12 - The Programmer's View of Linux Tools and Skills to Help You Write Assembly Code under a True 32-Bit OS
Chapter 13 - Coding for Linux Applying What You've Learned to a True Protected Mode Operating System
Conclusion - Not the End, But Only the Beginning
Appendix A - Partial 8086/8088 Instruction Set Reference
Appendix B - Segment Register Assumptions for Real Mode Segmented Model
Appendix C - Web URLs for Assembly Programmers
Appendix D - Segment Register Assumptions
Appendix E - What's on the CD-ROM?
Assembly Language Step-by-Step—Programming with DOS and Linux, Second Edition
Foreword
Introduction - "Why Would You Want to Do That?"
Chapter 1 - Another Pleasant Valley Saturday Understanding What Computers Really Do
Chapter 2 - Alien Bases Getting Your Arms around Binary and Hexadecimal
Chapter 3 - Lifting the Hood Discovering What Computers Actually Are
Chapter 4 - The Right to Assemble The Process of Making Assembly Language Programs
Chapter 5 - NASM-IDE: A Place to Stand Give me a lever long enough, and a place to stand, and I will move the Earth.
Chapter 6 - An Uneasy Alliance The x86 CPU and Its Segmented Memory System
Chapter 7 - Following Your Instructions Meeting Machine Instructions up Close and Personal
Chapter 8 - Our Object All Sublime Creating Programs that Work
Chapter 9 - Dividing and Conquering Using Procedures and Macros to Battle Complexity
Chapter 10 - Bits, Flags, Branches, and Tables Easing into Mainstream Assembly Programming
Chapter 11 - Stringing Them Up Those Amazing String Instructions
Chapter 12 - The Programmer's View of Linux Tools and Skills to Help You Write Assembly Code under a True 32-Bit OS
Chapter 13 - Coding for Linux Applying What You've Learned to a True Protected Mode Operating System
Conclusion - Not the End, But Only the Beginning
Appendix A - Partial 8086/8088 Instruction Set Reference
Appendix B - Segment Register Assumptions for Real Mode Segmented Model
Appendix C - Web URLs for Assembly Programmers
Appendix D - Segment Register Assumptions
Appendix E - What's on the CD-ROM?