I can't seem to understand how to I make it
I have been trying to use it this way:
MOV @RO,1 INC R0 MOV @R0,2 DEC R0 ;to point back to the 1st value
and it should save value 1 and 2, but it ends up making weird things
any help? Thanks
Please send me detailed description of Your problem (including the source text), we'll be glad to help You.
I guess Igor is a student.
Students tends to team up in cheating fraternities and share best practices how to find ready-to-use code that someone else wrote and how to later pretend it was own code and that the actual functionality of the code - and the reason for the code - is actually known.
I think it's a common idea among the younger generation that the brain can only manage a limited number of thoughts - and these better be saved for some other day. That the brain actually functions as a muscle - getting better capacity if trained - seems to have totally went over their heads. Or maybe in through one ear and without any resistance from active brain cells directly left through the other ear.
If "let me write the code for you" was an efficient way to teach things, then I would have thought all teachers would spend their time writing the required code for their students. Just that the people who manages to write the code themselves tends to get so very much better grades a bit down the line. The more cheating at the start of a course or a subject, the more totally lost you will be a bit later.
An interesting thing to consider: Where would all teachers be, if the teachers had spent their study years just trying to copy someone elses solutions.
Hello Per!
You are wrong here - I'm not a student, I'm assembly programmer which has many fortunate projects. As You (and Eric) have the tendency to send all of beginners to sit at the school desk, I want to help them instead. Please don't blame me.
Regards, Igor.
But how is it helping, if the goal isn't to give the requester the toolbox to be able to solve their problems themselves?
"Programming by asking on forums" is an extremely slow and inefficient way to get some work done. Especially since the answers to forum questions is normally limited to the original question - so a bad question gives a bad answer. Only own knowledge lets people realize that maybe they should have asked a completely different question or maybe avoided them from running into a dead end in the first place.
Software development really do requires lots of reading. And more importantly - it requires the knowledge of how to sift and locate the relevant information.