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author | Roland Pesch <pesch@cygnus> | 1994-02-12 07:12:40 +0000 |
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committer | Roland Pesch <pesch@cygnus> | 1994-02-12 07:12:40 +0000 |
commit | 71165d76981b8a23fa3a027ef67f1e7fc1a8b95c (patch) | |
tree | 972b5cad9e606d1eef8322ca39663560e8b11756 /gas | |
parent | 8aff8146d2fdfd62e068756c37d0e54bd8edf6b2 (diff) | |
download | gdb-71165d76981b8a23fa3a027ef67f1e7fc1a8b95c.zip gdb-71165d76981b8a23fa3a027ef67f1e7fc1a8b95c.tar.gz gdb-71165d76981b8a23fa3a027ef67f1e7fc1a8b95c.tar.bz2 |
Formatting improvements from first eyeball once-over.
Diffstat (limited to 'gas')
-rw-r--r-- | gas/doc/gasp.texi | 28 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/gas/doc/gasp.texi b/gas/doc/gasp.texi index df93d2e..453c822 100644 --- a/gas/doc/gasp.texi +++ b/gas/doc/gasp.texi @@ -126,12 +126,10 @@ count .ASSIGNA \&count + 1 .AENDW .ENDM - saveregs from=9 - saveregs 1,5 + saveregs from=12 - .RADIX Q -bar: mov #H'dead+12,r0 -foo .SDATAC "hello"<12> +bar: mov #H'dead+10,r0 +foo .SDATAC "hello"<10> .END @end example @end cartouche @@ -141,19 +139,10 @@ generates this assembly program: @cartouche @example - ; save r9..r14 - mov r9,@@-sp - mov r10,@@-sp - mov r11,@@-sp + ; save r12..r14 mov r12,@@-sp mov r13,@@-sp mov r14,@@-sp - ; save r1..r5 - mov r1,@@-sp - mov r2,@@-sp - mov r3,@@-sp - mov r4,@@-sp - mov r5,@@-sp bar: mov #57005+10,r0 foo: .byte 6,104,101,108,108,111,10 @@ -169,7 +158,7 @@ its output. In Unix and its ilk, you can do this, for example: @c FIXME! GASP filename suffix convention? @example -$ gasp prog.sp | as -o prog.o +$ gasp prog.asm | as -o prog.o @end example Naturally, there are also a few command-line options to allow you to @@ -177,7 +166,8 @@ request variations on this basic theme. Here is the full set of possibilities for the @sc{gasp} command line. @example -gasp [ -c ] [ -o @var{outfile} ] [ -p ] [ -s ] [ -u ] @var{infile} @dots{} +gasp [ -c ] [ -o @var{outfile} ] [ -p ] [ -s ] [ -u ] + @var{infile} @dots{} @end example @c FIXME!! Aren't all GNU programs supposed to have a -V or --version @@ -340,7 +330,7 @@ same block of assembly code. @itemx .AENDR If you simply need to repeat the same block of assembly over and over a fixed number of times, sandwich one instance of the repeated block -between these @code{.AREPEAT} and @code{.AENDR}. Specify the number of +between @code{.AREPEAT} and @code{.AENDR}. Specify the number of copies as @var{aexp} (which must be an absolute expression). For example, this repeats two assembly statements three times in succession: @@ -964,4 +954,6 @@ extending for @var{len} bytes. @unnumbered Index @printindex cp + +@contents @bye |