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OverviewLearning assembly language won’t make you a faster programmer. It won’t enable you to create portable, write-once, run-anywhere programs. So why learn it? The answer is that it will make you a better programmer. Author John Schwartzman takes a fresh look at low-level programming and explores how to write programs using the BIOS and glibc. This laboratory-based book aids the writing of high-level structured programs by showing what the processor can and can’t do and how it does it. You’ll take apart high-level structured C/C++ and show what the CPU is doing at every stage of the program. The book introduces programs and activities throughout the development process, providing sample code, makefiles, and shell scripts for each example program. With the help of Assembly Language Reimagined you’ll become a more capable and versatile computer engineer. What You will Learn Explore a new perspective on the Intel x64 microprocessor for low-level programming Understand what a processor is doing while a high-level structured computer language program is being run Solve problems with the help of software. See why assembly language programming is essential for every serious student of computer science Who This Book Is For Embedded Linux and Assembly developers, engineers and programmers, hobbyists from the Maker community, as well as college and graduate level students who have some prior knowledge of a structured high-level language like C or C++ Full Product DetailsAuthor: John SchwartzmanPublisher: APress Imprint: APress ISBN: 9798868817236Pages: 238 Publication Date: 13 November 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1: Using BIOS Services.- 2: Using BIOS Services.- 3: Prefer glibc Over Calls to the BIOS.- 4: Passing Information to a Program on the Command Line.- 5: Using Macros and Passing Arguments on the Stack.- 6: Conditional Compilation and Conditional Builds.- 7: Recursion.- 8: Using Floating Point Registers.- 9: The commaSeperate Utility Program.- 10: The hhmmss Utility Program.- 11: Creating a Shared Library.- 12: Sorting an Array of Integers.- 13: Sorting and Array of Strings.- 14: Finding, Reading and Sorting File and Directory Information.- 15: Creating and Solving a Linked List.- 16: Creating and Sorting a Linked List.- 17: Reading and Sorting File and Directory.- 18: Reading File and Directory Information.- Afterword.- Appendix A.ReviewsAuthor InformationJohn Schwartzman is a Hardware/Software Engineer with over 40+ years of industry and teaching experience of hands-on coding and design. He has managed groups in tech companies large and small, and is a regular writer for Linux Magazine and Linux Format. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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