Date : Mon, 25 Feb 2008 19:41:14 +1000
From : cjl_craves@... (Peter Craven)
Subject: Cross Assemlby
Found this site.....
http://www.mwenterprises.co.uk/E/UCA_XASM/index.html
Cheers
Pete
-----Original Message-----
From: bbc-micro-bounces+cjl_craves=yahoo.com.au@...
[mailto:bbc-micro-bounces+cjl_craves=yahoo.com.au@...] On
Behalf Of Steve Bass
Sent: Monday, 25 February 2008 18:38
To: bbc-micro@...
Subject: Re: [BBC-Micro] Cross Assemlby
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul" <peejaygee@...>
To: <bbc-micro@...>
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2008 1:01 AM
Subject: [BBC-Micro] Cross Assemlby
> Dear All,
>
> Apologies if this has been brought up before, but I did download the
> Archives and did a search for a few key words and nothing come up.....
>
> Ok where do I start....
>
> Machine Language on the beeb that I remember, was done though the basic
> interpreter....
>
> Now in the modern age, and the ease with Emulators and Cross Assembly, I
> was
> wondering if anybody has (or knows of a direction to go) dealt with
> Cross-Assembly using a PC and a beeb Emulator....
>
> Ok, as an example, I write something in notepad, a DOS program converts it
> into a format that the machine understands and I drag and drop the new
> created program into the emulator, and execute a command (or it auto runs)
> and the program I've written runs....bugs and testing later, I then create
> a
> "!Boot" etc on a disk image, transfer back to a real disk, onto a real
> Beeb...(that's the plan ultimately)
>
> I've been doing this on the C64 (WinVice Emulator) for a few years now,
> but
> I would really like to have a go with the BBC varieties....
>
> Has anybody attempted this?
>
> Regards
> Paul.
Hi
I've been interested in obtaining a cross asembler that would work on the
Archimedes/RiscPc that would cope with a number of of CPUs, including the
6502.
I recently came across, what I thought would fit my needs exactly, in the
form of an application called Cross 32.
It was reviewed by Dave Lawrence in the Septtember 1991 edition of BBC Acorn
User.
The application was originally available from Ian Copestake Software but I
haven't found any information of from where it can be obtained of if it
indeed was ever sold commercially.
The only information I found that the application was developed by Baildon
Electronics, based in Saltaire, Shipley, West Yorkshire.
If anyone has any knowledge of this I would be extremely interested in
knowing about it.
Regards
Steve
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