flat assembler
Message board for the users of flat assembler.
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Patrick_ 11 Mar 2006, 21:50
I _highly_ recommend Emacs. I use it all of the time. I use it all of the time with C, and I'm learning assembly right now, and it's fine with that, also. It's got support for many different languages, and very powerful.
If you don't like Emacs, you can try vim, but I honestly hate the modes, and I like Emacs' "auto-indenter" (just press tab in C/C++ mode, or other languages, and it auto indents it properly). |
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Tomasz Grysztar 11 Mar 2006, 21:58
The point for vim is that its recent distributions contain a syntax file dedicated to fasm.
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Endre 11 Mar 2006, 23:50
First you will probably hate emacs then you'll try it again and will discover some of its advantages, then you will not want any other editor. I use it everywhere on windows, linux, solaris, etc. I've also learned its lisp programming language to a certain extent. With program etags you can create database to be able to search for definitions, declarations etc. similarly to visual studio on windows.
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flash 12 Mar 2006, 01:01
Thanks very much... I will test
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Patrick_ 12 Mar 2006, 02:55
Endre wrote: First you will probably hate emacs then you'll try it again and will discover some of its advantages, then you will not want any other editor. I use it everywhere on windows, linux, solaris, etc. I've also learned its lisp programming language to a certain extent. With program etags you can create database to be able to search for definitions, declarations etc. similarly to visual studio on windows. Haha... that's exactly how my experience with it was. I literally _cannot_ live with any other editor. It drives me absolutely nuts to use anything else. At first, it was kind of annoying. After I used it for about a day, I started getting used to it, recognizing it's power. Now I really appreciate it, and it's great. Enjoy. |
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rugxulo 14 Mar 2006, 20:21
Are we talking GNU Emacs, XEmacs, JASSPA MicroEmacs, etc? For sure, Emacs has some good ideas, but it is overkill for a lot of things (and so is VIM). Besides, both take up quite a bit of space, so make sure you really need all that extra functionality.
Anyways, for a good compromise, try one of the following: Jed, Joe, Vile, or e3 (or something completely different like TDE). |
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fox 04 Apr 2006, 14:24
anyone used gedit so far? I havent, just asking if it has any implementations..
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Mark Larson 08 Nov 2006, 20:50
I have used VC++ IDE for many years. So I prefer graphical IDEs. So I am using Kdevelop. I am very fast on the keyboard and prefer kebyoard shortcuts, so I still use a lot of keyboard shortcuts with Kdevelop.
_________________ BIOS programmers do it fastest! ![]() |
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daver 08 Nov 2006, 22:20
Hi
FasmW works fine for me under Wine ![]() Cheers Dave |
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vid 08 Nov 2006, 23:54
i believe FASMsyntax file for VIM is unmainaitained. I was against it, because it was too much "VIMy" and too little "FASMy"... you can search for this.
anyway, it could take a re-do. current version, is (i believe), *generated* from docs. I plan to start using linux, and i might prepare normal version there. but, if there is some devoted VIM/FASM user here, he is more than welcomed to help. |
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Chewy509 09 Nov 2006, 01:51
fox wrote: anyone used gedit so far? I havent, just asking if it has any implementations.. yep... But prefer jEdit over gedit. jEdit already has x86 asm syntax built-in, and with the right amount of tweaking can become a full IDE. There's even a hex editor plug-in for jEdit. jEdit also runs on anything that can run a Java VM, so has it advantages... gedit doesn't come with any syntax highlighting for asm by default, but there are a few templates out there on the net. |
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anoobis 22 Aug 2014, 19:12
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KevinN 23 Aug 2014, 04:18
anoobis wrote: Editor: Sublime Text thanks, this looks interesting - like a simpler vim or emacs but becomes nagware i guess and not free on the whole |
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JohnFound 28 Aug 2014, 21:12
I suggest using Fresh IDE in Linux (needs WINE). There are several key advantages in this setting:
1. The same tools and work-flow in Linux and Windows. 2. Linux and Windows programs can be developed, debugged and executed from the same IDE under Linux. 3. All advanced Fresh IDE, FASM specific development, debugging and source navigation tools are available. How to setup Fresh IDE under Linux is described in the related Setup manual Here is the short movie demonstrating how Linux and Windows applications can be compiled and executed from Fresh IDE under Linux: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8d_kteyf_8 |
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Matrix 31 Aug 2014, 05:47
geany is a nice looking IDE too, and is GNU
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JohnFound 31 Aug 2014, 06:41
I use geany for C++ programming from time to time (helping my daughter for the homeworks) and it is good. But not for serious FASM programming.
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sakkiesalm 07 Sep 2014, 04:25
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anoobis 08 Sep 2014, 11:53
KevinN wrote:
Highlight can be used in TextMate (MacOS), it is *.tmLanguage file. Sublime worth $59, but I use it more than a year without a license. Sometimes a window pops up. This is the best text editor, IMHO. Probably because in the past I have only used Nano, Gedit and Kate. Sublime is a cross-platform, you can use the same copy on a different OS. In addition there is n++ and it's free. |
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goren 18 Nov 2023, 01:54
I found a fasm-mode for emacs but the indentation is bad for macroinstructions. Should I just use their default asm-mode or some nasm mode?
_________________ Rust — A language empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software. |
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