Note: forward references (i.e. references to labels which have not been defined yet) are OK. Moreover, the assembler operates so that even resolving backward references is always postponed until the second pass.
.ln <line_number>
Associates all the following instructions (until next .ln directive) with a particular line number within source code in a higher-level language (say, C, C++, BASIC, Pascal, etc.) Compilers should use this directive extensively while emitting code so that the assembler can report errors and other problems in association with the source line that caused them.
.label <global_label>
Introduces a global label. Label name is a number in range [99, 32768]. It does not matter (at all) what that label denotes program code or data, or even something else (like control information); the label is just assigned the current value of the Program Counter (PC). Two, or more, labels on sequential lines are OK; these labels will be identical.
.disp <global_label> <displacement>
Allocates 2 bytes and then stores there the unsigned distance from the current position of the Program Counter forward to the label <global_label> + <displacement>. I.e. the following sequence
.disp 555 0 .label 555
stores 0, not 2; while the following sequence stores 7:
.disp 333 0 .skip 7 .label 333
Currently, this directive is used in conjunction with the switch opcode only.
.ldisp <global_label> <displacement>
Allocates 4 bytes and then stores there the distance from the current position of the Program Counter to the label <global_label> + <displacement>.
.offset <global_label>
Allocates 2 bytes and stores an absolute offset to the label <global_label>. This opcode is currently used for building export tables only.
.even
If current value of Program Counter is an odd number, then this directive emits zero bytes. Please note that there is no need to align code, so this directive is only useful for data elements bigger then one byte.
.skip <number_of_bytes>
Advances Program Counter by specified <number_of_bytes> (i.e. allocates<number_of_bytes> zero bytes).
.byte <number>
Emits byte <number>. Preferred way to initialize static data.
.word <number>
Emits word <number>.
.string <text_in_double_quotes>
Emits string literal with the value <text_in_double_quotes>, plus terminating 0. Unfortunately, there is currently no way to escape any symbols, notably newline and quotable quotation marks. As a workaround, the .byte directive could be used to emit any bytes, but please be warned that, in the future, characters may no longer be single bytes.
.bss
Starts the 'bss' (Blank Storage Segment) segment. Preferred place for uninitialized global variable.
.text
Starts segment of code.
.data
Starts segment of data.
.rodata
Starts segment of data. Duplicate segments of this type will be merged by vlink.
.public <label> "<name>"
Declares public symbol for using in other modules.
.extern <label> "<name>"
Declares extern symbol used in module.
.end
Specifies logical end of the source file. Source files that do not use this directive may not compile with future versions of the assembler.
file: /Techref/cybiko/bc/directives.htm, 3KB, , updated: 2008/6/12 19:37, local time: 2024/11/9 18:46,
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