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56 >Chapter 3. LWASM</TD
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70 WIDTH="100%"></DIV
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71 ><DIV
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72 CLASS="SECTION"
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73 ><H1
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74 CLASS="SECTION"
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75 ><A
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76 NAME="AEN659"
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77 >3.10. Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
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78 ></H1
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79 ><P
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80 >There are a number of options that affect the way assembly is performed.
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81 Some of these options can only be specified on the command line because
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82 they determine something absolute about the assembly process. These include
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83 such things as the output target. Other things may be switchable during
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84 the assembly process. These are known as pragmas and are, by definition,
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85 not portable between assemblers.</P
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86 ><P
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87 >LWASM supports a number of pragmas that affect code generation or
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88 otherwise affect the behaviour of the assembler. These may be specified by
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89 way of a command line option or by assembler directives. The directives
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90 are as follows.</P
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91 ><P
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92 ></P
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93 ><DIV
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94 CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
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95 ><DL
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96 ><DT
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97 >PRAGMA <CODE
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98 CLASS="PARAMETER"
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99 >pragma[,...]</CODE
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100 ></DT
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101 ><DD
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102 ><P
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103 >Specifies that the assembler should bring into force all <CODE
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104 CLASS="PARAMETER"
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105 >pragma</CODE
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106 >s
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107 specified. Any unrecognized pragma will cause an assembly error. The new
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108 pragmas will take effect immediately. This directive should be used when
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109 the program will assemble incorrectly if the pragma is ignored or not supported.</P
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110 ></DD
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111 ><DT
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112 >*PRAGMA <CODE
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113 CLASS="PARAMETER"
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114 >pragma[,...]</CODE
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115 ></DT
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116 ><DD
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117 ><P
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118 >This is identical to the PRAGMA directive except no error will occur with
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119 unrecognized or unsupported pragmas. This directive, by virtue of starting
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120 with a comment character, will also be ignored by assemblers that do not
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121 support this directive. Use this variation if the pragma is not required
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122 for correct functioning of the code.</P
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123 ></DD
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124 ><DT
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125 >*PRAGMAPUSH <CODE
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126 CLASS="PARAMETER"
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127 >pragma[,...]</CODE
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128 ></DT
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129 ><DD
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130 ><P
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131 >This directive saves the current state of the specified pragma(s) for later retrieval. See discussion below for more information.</P
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132 ><P
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133 >This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
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134 ></DD
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135 ><DT
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136 >*PRAGMAPOP <CODE
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137 CLASS="PARAMETER"
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138 >pragma[,...]</CODE
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139 ></DT
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140 ><DD
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141 ><P
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142 >This directive restores the previously saved state of the specified pragma(s). See discussion below for more information.</P
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143 ><P
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144 >This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
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145 ></DD
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146 ></DL
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147 ></DIV
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148 ><P
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149 >Each pragma supported has a positive version and a negative version.
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150 The positive version enables the pragma while the negative version disables
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151 it. The negatitve version is simply the positive version with "no" prefixed
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152 to it. For instance, "pragma" vs. "nopragma". When only one version is
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153 listed below, its opposite can be obtained by prepending "no" if it is not
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154 present or removing "no" from the beginning if it is present.</P
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155 ><P
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156 >Pragmas are not case sensitive.</P
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157 ><P
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158 ></P
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159 ><DIV
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160 CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
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161 ><DL
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162 ><DT
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163 >6800compat</DT
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164 ><DD
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165 ><P
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166 >When in force, this pragma enables recognition of various
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167 compatibility instructions useful when assembling 6800 code. These
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168 compatibility instructions are assembled into equivalent 6809 instructions.
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169 This mode also includes several analogous instructions which are not
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170 strictly 6800 instructions but allow the similar style to be applied to 6809
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171 specific features.</P
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172 ><P
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173 >Technically, a compliant 6809 assembler must recognize these
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174 instructions by default since Motorola advertised the 6809 as being source
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175 compatible with the 6800. However, most source code does not require this
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176 compatibility and LWASM itself did not support these instructions prior to
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177 version 4.11 so this mode is disabled by default.</P
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178 ></DD
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179 ><DT
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180 >6809</DT
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181 ><DD
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182 ><P
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183 >This pragma allows you to mark a section of code as 6809-only. In ths mode,
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184 the assembler will throw an error if any 6309 instructions are used.</P
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185 ></DD
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186 ><DT
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187 >6309</DT
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188 ><DD
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189 ><P
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190 >This pragma enables the use of 6309 instructions and disables any 6809 specific
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191 instructions. It also changes the cycle count listing output (if selected)
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192 to display 6309 timings.</P
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193 ></DD
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194 ><DT
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195 >6809conv, 6309conv</DT
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196 ><DD
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197 ><P
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198 >These pragmas enable convenience instructions extending the 6809 and 6309
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199 instruction sets respectively. For more information, see
|
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200 <A
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201 HREF="x800.html"
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202 >Section 3.11</A
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203 >.</P
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204 ></DD
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205 ><DT
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206 >index0tonone</DT
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207 ><DD
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208 ><P
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209 >When in force, this pragma enables an optimization affecting indexed addressing
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210 modes. When the offset expression in an indexed mode evaluates to zero but is
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211 not explicity written as 0, this will replace the operand with the equivalent
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212 no offset mode, thus creating slightly faster code. Because of the advantages
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213 of this optimization, it is enabled by default.</P
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214 ></DD
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215 ><DT
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216 >cescapes</DT
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217 ><DD
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218 ><P
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219 >This pragma will cause strings in the FCC, FCS, and FCN pseudo operations to
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220 have C-style escape sequences interpreted. The one departure from the official
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221 spec is that unrecognized escape sequences will return either the character
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222 immediately following the backslash or some undefined value. Do not rely
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223 on the behaviour of undefined escape sequences.</P
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224 ></DD
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225 ><DT
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226 >importundefexport</DT
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227 ><DD
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228 ><P
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229 >This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When
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230 in force, it will cause the EXPORT directive to act as IMPORT if the symbol
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231 to be exported is not defined. This is provided for compatibility with the
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232 output of gcc6809 and should not be used in hand written code. Because of
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233 the confusion this pragma can cause, it is disabled by default.</P
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234 ></DD
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235 ><DT
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236 >undefextern</DT
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237 ><DD
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238 ><P
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239 >This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When in
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240 force, if the assembler sees an undefined symbol on the second pass, it will
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241 automatically define it as an external symbol. This automatic definition will
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242 apply for the remainder of the assembly process, even if the pragma is
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243 subsequently turned off. Because this behaviour would be potentially surprising,
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244 this pragma defaults to off.</P
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245 ><P
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246 >The primary use for this pragma is for projects that share a large number of
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247 symbols between source files. In such cases, it is impractical to enumerate
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248 all the external references in every source file. This allows the assembler
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249 and linker to do the heavy lifting while not preventing a particular source
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250 module from defining a local symbol of the same name as an external symbol
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251 if it does not need the external symbol. (This pragma will not cause an
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252 automatic external definition if there is already a locally defined symbol.)</P
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253 ><P
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254 >This pragma will often be specified on the command line for large projects.
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255 However, depending on the specific dynamics of the project, it may be sufficient
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256 for one or two files to use this pragma internally.</P
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257 ></DD
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258 ><DT
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259 >export</DT
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260 ><DD
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261 ><P
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262 >This pragma causes all symbols to be added to the export list
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263 automatically. This is useful when a large number of symbols need to be
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264 exported but you do not wish to include an EXPORT directive for all of them.
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265 This is often useful on the command line but might be useful even inline
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266 with the PRAGMA directive if a large number of symbols in a row are to be
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267 exported.</P
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268 ></DD
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269 ><DT
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270 >dollarlocal</DT
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271 ><DD
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272 ><P
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273 >When set, a "$" in a symbol makes it local. When not set, "$" does not
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274 cause a symbol to be local. It is set by default except when using the OS9
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275 target.</P
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276 ></DD
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277 ><DT
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278 >dollarnotlocal</DT
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279 ><DD
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280 ><P
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281 > This is the same as the "dollarlocal" pragma except its sense is
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282 reversed. That is, "dollarlocal" and "nodollarnotlocal" are equivalent and
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283 "nodollarlocal" and "dollarnotlocal" are equivalent. </P
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284 ></DD
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285 ><DT
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286 >pcaspcr</DT
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287 ><DD
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288 ><P
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289 > Normally, LWASM makes a distinction between PC and PCR in program
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290 counter relative addressing. In particular, the use of PC means an absolute
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291 offset from PC while PCR causes the assembler to calculate the offset to the
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292 specified operand and use that as the offset from PC. By setting this
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293 pragma, you can have PC treated the same as PCR. </P
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294 ></DD
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295 ><DT
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296 >shadow</DT
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297 ><DD
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298 ><P
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299 >When this pragma is in effect, it becomes possible to define a macro
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300 that matches an internal operation code. Thus, it makes it possible to
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301 redefine either CPU instructions or pseudo operations. Because this feature
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302 is of dubious utility, it is disabled by default.</P
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303 ></DD
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304 ><DT
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305 >nolist</DT
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306 ><DD
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307 ><P
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308 >Lines where this pragma is in effect will not appear in the assembly
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309 listing. Also, any symbols defined under this pragma will not show up in
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310 the symbol list. This is most useful in include files to avoid spamming the
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311 assembly listing with dozens, hundreds, or thousands of irrelevant
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312 symbols.</P
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313 ></DD
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314 ><DT
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315 >autobranchlength</DT
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316 ><DD
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317 ><P
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318 >One of the perennial annoyances for 6809 programmers is that the
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319 mneumonics for the short and long branch instructions are different (bxx vs.
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320 lbxx), which is at odds with the rest of the instruction set. This pragma
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321 is a solution to those annoying byte overflow errors that short branch
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322 instructions tend to aquire.</P
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323 ><P
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324 >When this pragma is in effect, which is not the default, whenever any
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325 relative branch instruction is used, its size will be automatically
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326 determined based on the actual distance to the destination. In other words,
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327 one can write code with long or short branches everywhere and the assembler
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328 will choose a size for the branch.</P
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329 ><P
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330 >Also, while this pragma is in effect, the > and < symbols can be used
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331 to force the branch size, analogous to their use for other instructions with
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332 < forcing 8 bit offsets and > forcing 16 bit offets.</P
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333 ><P
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334 >Because this pragma leads to source that is incompatible with other
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335 assemblers, it is strongly recommended that it be invoked using the PRAGMA
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336 directive within the source code rather than on the command line or via the
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337 *PRAGMA directive. This way, an error will be raised if someone tries to
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338 assemble the code under a different assembler.</P
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339 ></DD
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340 ><DT
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341 >nosymbolcase, symbolnocase</DT
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342 ><DD
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343 ><P
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344 >Any symbol defined while this pragma is in force will be treated as
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345 case insensitive, regardless whether the pragma is in force when the symbol
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346 is referenced.</P
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347 ><P
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348 >It is important to note that this pragma will not work as expected in
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349 all cases when using the object file assembly target. It is intended for
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350 use only when the assembler will be producing the final binary.</P
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351 ></DD
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352 ><DT
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353 >condundefzero</DT
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354 ><DD
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355 ><P
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356 >This pragma will cause the assembler to change the way it handles
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357 symbols in conditional expressions. Ordinarily, any symbol that is not
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358 defined prior to the conditional will throw an undefined symbol error. With
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359 this pragma in effect, symbols that are not yet defined at the point the
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360 conditional is encountered will be treated as zero.</P
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361 ><P
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362 >This is not the default because it encourages poor code design. One
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363 should use the "IFDEF" or "IFNDEF" conditionals to test for the presence of
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364 a symbol.</P
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365 ><P
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366 >It is important to note that if a symbol is defined but it does not
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367 yet evaluate to a constant value at the point where the conditional appears,
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368 the assembler will still complain about a non constant condition.</P
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369 ></DD
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370 ><DT
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371 >forwardrefmax</DT
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372 ><DD
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373 ><P
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374 >This pragma will disable forward reference optimization completely.
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375 Ordinarily, LWASM will attempt to select the shortest possible addressing
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376 mode for forward references. However, in many source files, especially
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377 those not using the PCR relative addressing modes, this optimization is
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378 pointless since the assembler will almost certainly settle on a 16 bit
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379 offset or address. If all variables in the direct page are defined before
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380 the main body of the code, the benefit of forward reference optimization
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381 almost certainly vanishes completely. However, the cost of doing that
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382 optimization remains and can result in a very long assembly time.</P
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383 ><P
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384 >Enabling this pragma will cause all forward references to use the
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385 maximum offset or address size, much the same has EDTASM and other pure
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386 two pass assemblers do. The side effect is that all line lengths and
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387 symbol values are fully resolved after the initial parsing pass and the
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388 amount of work to resolve everything becomes almost nil.</P
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389 ><P
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390 >While this pragma can be applied selectively to sections of source
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391 code (use *PRAGMA if doing so and compatibility with other assemblers
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392 is desired), it is likely more useful when provided as a command line
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393 pragma.</P
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394 ><P
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395 >It should be noted that the presence or absence of this pragma
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396 will not change the correctness of the generated code unless cycle counts
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397 or byte counts are critical (which they usually are not). It also will
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398 not override the operand size override prefixes (< and >). It only
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399 applies when the assembler is left to guess what the operand size is.</P
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400 ></DD
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401 ><DT
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402 >operandsizewarning</DT
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403 ><DD
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404 ><P
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405 >Enabling this pragma will cause LWASM to show a warning when it
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406 detects that a smaller addressing mode could be used for an instruction.
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407 This is particularly useful for finding places where long branches are used
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408 where short branches could be used instead. It will also show the warnings
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409 for indexing offsets (regardless of whether the operand size is
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410 forced).</P
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411 ><P
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412 >As of LWASM 4.16, no other checks are performed.</P
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413 ></DD
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414 ><DT
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415 >qrts</DT
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416 ><DD
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417 ><P
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418 > Enables the use of the ?RTS branch target. ?RTS is implemented to maintain
|
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419 compatibility with the MACRO-80c assembler. It works by searching backward
|
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420 in the code for an RTS instruction. If none is found, it inverts the branch
|
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421 logic and inserts an RTS following the branch instruction. Below you can
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422 see how a BMI (2B xx) has been assembled as a BPL *+1 (2A 01) to skip over an
|
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423 inserted RTS (39).</P
|
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424 ><PRE
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425 CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
|
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426 >1D1E 7D1D1D TST WHICH1
|
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427 1D21 2A0139 BMI ?RTS
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428 1D24 BD1D65 JSR INV</PRE
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429 ></DD
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430 ><DT
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431 >m80ext</DT
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432 ><DD
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433 ><P
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434 > This pragma (along with pragma qrts) enables some uncommon behaviors to
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435 accomodate The Micro Works MACRO-80c assembler from 1982. This assembler
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436 was used by a number of notable TRS-80 Color Computer applications and the
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437 goal of this pragma is to allow them to build identical binaries from
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438 unmodified, vintage source code.</P
|
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439 ><P
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440 > In m80ext mode, the handling of the "END" pseudo-op changes when used inside
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441 an include file. Instead of terminating all assembly, it merely stops
|
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442 processing of the current include file (this behavior matches the original
|
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443 Motorola 6809 assembler). In addition, loading an ASCII value with a single
|
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444 quote (e.g., LDA #'N) is extended to 16-bit registers (e.g., LDD #'NO).
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445 LWASM normally supports this via double quote and that is the proper use in
|
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446 modern code. Finally, the FCC pseudo-op is extended to handle FCB-like
|
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447 behavior after the closing delimiter:</P
|
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448 ><PRE
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449 CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
|
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450 > FCC "Greetings from 1982",13,0</PRE
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451 ></DD
|
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452 ><DT
|
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453 >testmode</DT
|
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454 ><DD
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455 ><P
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456 > This pragma is intended for internal testing purposes. In testmode, the
|
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457 assembler searches for a specially-formatted comment starting with a
|
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458 semicolon followed by a period. Immediately afterward are a list of hex
|
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459 bytes that the assembler is expected to generate. Likewise, if the
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460 assembler is expected to throw an error or warning on a given line, you can
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461 check by specifying "E:" followed by the error number. In this case the
|
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462 error is ignored and the assembler continues ignoring the line in question. </P
|
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463 ><PRE
|
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464 CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
|
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465 >1D1E 7D1D1D TST WHICH1 ;.7d1d1d
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466 1D21 2A0139 BMI ?RTS ;.2a0139
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467 1D24 1D24 FDB * ;.1d24
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468 1D26 xyz INV ;.E:32 (Error 32 is "Bad opcode")</PRE
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469 ></DD
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470 ></DL
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471 ></DIV
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472 ><P
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473 >As a convenience, each input file has a pragma state stack. This
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474 allows, through the use of *PRAGMAPUSH and *PRAGMAPOP, a file to change a
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475 pragma state and then restore it to the precise state it had previously.
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476 If, at the end of an input file, all pragma states have not been popped,
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477 they will be removed from the stack. Thus, it is critical to employ
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478 *PRAGMAPOP correctly. Because each input file has its own pragma stack,
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479 using *PRAGMAPUSH in one file and *PRAGMAPOP in another file will not
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480 work.</P
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481 ><P
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482 >Pragma stacks are more useful in include files, in particular in
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483 conjunction with the nolist pragma. One can push the state of the nolist
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484 pragma, engage the nolist pragma, and then pop the state of the nolist
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485 pragma at the end of the include file. This will cause the entire include
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486 file to operate under the nolist pragma. However, if the file is included
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487 while nolist is already engaged, it will not undo that state.</P
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488 ></DIV
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489 ><DIV
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490 CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
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491 ><HR
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492 ALIGN="LEFT"
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493 WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
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494 SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
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496 BORDER="0"
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497 CELLPADDING="0"
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498 CELLSPACING="0"
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499 ><TR
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500 ><TD
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501 WIDTH="33%"
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502 ALIGN="left"
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503 VALIGN="top"
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504 ><A
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505 HREF="x595.html"
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506 ACCESSKEY="P"
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507 >Prev</A
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508 ></TD
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509 ><TD
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510 WIDTH="34%"
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511 ALIGN="center"
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512 VALIGN="top"
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513 ><A
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515 ACCESSKEY="H"
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516 >Home</A
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517 ></TD
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518 ><TD
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519 WIDTH="33%"
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520 ALIGN="right"
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521 VALIGN="top"
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522 ><A
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523 HREF="x800.html"
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524 ACCESSKEY="N"
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525 >Next</A
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526 ></TD
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527 ></TR
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528 ><TR
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529 ><TD
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530 WIDTH="33%"
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531 ALIGN="left"
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532 VALIGN="top"
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533 >Object Files and Sections</TD
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534 ><TD
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535 WIDTH="34%"
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536 ALIGN="center"
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537 VALIGN="top"
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538 ><A
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539 HREF="c62.html"
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540 ACCESSKEY="U"
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541 >Up</A
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542 ></TD
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543 ><TD
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544 WIDTH="33%"
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545 ALIGN="right"
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546 VALIGN="top"
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547 >Convenience Instructions</TD
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548 ></TR
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549 ></TABLE
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550 ></DIV
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551 ></BODY
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552 ></HTML
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553 > |