Helo Jeroen,
> Indeed. Try comp.lang.asm.x86, you may have more luck finding
> people who can answer this question. It's not Win32-specific.
Reading your own reply, neither is C(++), and still people are asking
questions about it here. :-)
And by the way, Tasm v5.0 is *very* Win32 specific.
But its a good suggestion. If do not get an answer here I can certainly try
there.
> I can't write an assembly program that will print "Hello, world!"
> on any Linux system
Don't attribute that to the language or the OS, but to your own knowledge of
both. <whistle> Besides, I know many people who can't do it on X86 either
...
> I can't even write one that will do it on both Windows 3.0 and
> Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit.
Same problems apply to the different versions of Linux.
... Or you must mean that you can often (but not always) take your
*sourcefile* to a different platform, use a fully different,
tailored-to-the-OS C(++) compiler (with its own set of include, lib and
other OS-dependant files) and re-compile it to an executable there.
But thats not what I would call "... you can do stuff in C that you can't in
assembly".
> (and on Windows, in fact, it's possible to write a more
> complicated program that pops up a window, without
> changing the code).
I'm sorry, but "write a more complicated program" in the same sentence as
"without changing the code" does not make much sense to me.
Regards,
Rudy Wieser
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Jeroen Mostert <
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