This page (revision-53) was last changed on 24-May-2023 06:18 by Peter Dell 

This page was created on 05-Apr-2014 09:34 by Gromit

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Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
53 24-May-2023 06:18 3 KB Peter Dell to previous Add year of first release
52 21-May-2023 18:32 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last
51 21-May-2023 18:30 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last Sort order
50 21-May-2023 18:30 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last Add tutorials
49 21-May-2023 18:28 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last Adapt wording, order and URLs (too https)
48 03-Feb-2023 15:21 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
47 31-Mar-2020 22:14 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last 130XE+ Makroassembler V2.1 mit MyDOS 4.50 (1991) ==> 130XE+ Makroassembler
46 26-May-2019 16:17 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
45 08-Mar-2019 21:25 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
44 08-May-2018 17:02 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
43 08-May-2018 17:02 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
42 08-May-2018 17:02 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
41 08-May-2018 17:01 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last Atari Macro Assembler and Program-Text Editor CX8121 ==> Atari Macro Assembler

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At line 2 changed one line
Given the extremely slow performance of [Atari Basic], the go-to language for programmers writing games or other speed-critical programs was 6502 assembler. The 6502 was somewhat infamous for its simplified design, but this also meant its assembler was very simple and easy to learn. As an introduction to assembler, there are few machines better than the Atari 8-bit.
Given the slow performance of [Atari Basic], the go-to language for programmers writing games or other speed-critical programs was 6502 assembler. The 6502 was somewhat infamous for its simplified design, but this also meant its assembler was very simple and easy to learn. As an introduction to assembler, there are few machines better than the Atari 8-bit.