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ALP Programming Guide and Reference: Difference between revisions

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ALP also offers a rich set of command line options, as well as a comprehensive listing output cabability that is highly configurable, allowing a visual perspective not possible with other assemblers.
ALP also offers a rich set of command line options, as well as a comprehensive listing output cabability that is highly configurable, allowing a visual perspective not possible with other assemblers.


==Links==
==Editions==
* alpref.inf (Mar 1997)
* alpref.inf (Oct 1997)
* alpref.inf (Oct 1997)
* [https://archive.org/download/IBMOS2Warp4ToolkitDocuments2/alpref.inf alpref.inf] (Feb 2000)
* [https://archive.org/download/IBMOS2Warp4ToolkitDocuments2/alpref.inf alpref.inf] (Feb 2000)


[[Category:Online Books]]
[[Category:Online Books]]

Revision as of 00:28, 9 November 2017

Reprint Courtesy of International Business Machines Corporation, © International Business Machines Corporation

The Assembly Language Processor (ALP) is an assembler that runs under OS/2 Warp. ALP is a functional replacement for the Microsoft Macro Assembler (MASM) and accepts:

  • The full syntax of the Intel 80X86 architecture
  • The full syntax of the MASM 5.10 high-level directive language
  • A subset of the MASM 6.00 high-level directive language

ALP generates standard Object Module Format (OMF) files that can be linked to produce DOS or OS/2 executables. It can also generate symbolic debugging information compatible with the IBM family of source code debuggers. A MASM 5.10-compatible command line utility (MASM2ALP) is also provided to enable use of ALP with little or no change to existing build environments.

ALP also offers a rich set of command line options, as well as a comprehensive listing output cabability that is highly configurable, allowing a visual perspective not possible with other assemblers.

Editions

  • alpref.inf (Mar 1997)
  • alpref.inf (Oct 1997)
  • alpref.inf (Feb 2000)