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small flame by Gaffer of PRoMETHEUS /code/effects/fire/flame160.zip
| 18 Mar 1997 (catalog date)
2,964 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| Rating:
| Source for a small fire routine. Doesn't actually work on my computer. To answer a question proposed by the author about size optimization, inc al is bigger than inc ax because intel doesn't have an inc /r8 instruction. inc ax is of the form inc /r16 which compiles to db 40+rw, where rw = 0 for ax, 1 for cx, 2 for dx, 3 for bx, ... inc al is of the form inc r/m8 and compiles to db FE /1 where /1 = c0 for al, c4 for ah, c1 for bl..., 05 for a memory reference.... See an intel document for more details.
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CPUID for intel by Doctor Sludge /code/hardware/cpu/cputest2.zip
| 10 Jan 1997 (catalog date)
10,953 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| Rating:
| Source to detect which intel chip is in a computer - Detects the processor for sure, but does it by checking for invalid opcodes. If you need to detect CPU type, I suggest /code/hardware/processor/cpuid3.zip.
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Intel docs by ? /code/hardware/cpu/intel.doc
| 10 Jan 1997 (catalog date)
114,654 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| Rating:
| A complete listing of the 80x86 opcodes - Great reference for those learning assembler and those needing to double check opcodes. Dubious clock listings (none for pentium.)
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Netwide Assembler by Simon Tatham, Julian Hall /code/utils/compiler/nasm094.zip
| 02 Jul 1997 (catalog date)
320,576 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| Rating:
| A freeware assembler with good support. People have been switching from TASM to this assembler, especially linux and 68K coders. It is still being supported by the makers so it understands newer op codes, like mmx instructions, so you don't need to get intel's 'macros' for new opcodes.
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