Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
However, the use of machine code monitors persists, especially in the area of hobby-built computers.
Even after full-featured assemblers became readily available, a machine code monitor was indispensable for debugging programs.
The Super-80 came with a 2kB machine code monitor program in ROM.
When the microprocessor encountered a break point the test program would be interrupted and control would be transferred to the machine code monitor.
Earliest demos were typically made in machine code monitors, the same programs that were used by the crackers to crack copy protections.
Additionally it supports networked drives (PCLink) and has a built-in machine code monitor and file manager.
The JR-200 ROM also contained a machine code monitor to enter and execute machine code programs.
Also, for serious programmers, the Plus/4 featured a ROM-resident machine code monitor, which rekindled a tradition from the first Commodore computers.
Another unusual feature of the Einstein was that on start-up the computer entered a simple machine code monitor, called MOS (Machine Operating System).
Read-Only Memory: 16 KB (with BASIC interpreter and Machine code monitor)
The goal was to have freezer style (all registers including I/O editable) and fast machine code monitor which supports illegal 6502 and SuperCPU emulation mode opcodes.
Electronics Australia) and basic components, including 16kB of RAM and a 2kB EPROM containing a machine code monitor program.
Some full-featured machine code monitors provide detailed control ("single-stepping") of the execution of machine language programs (much like a debugger), and include absolute-address code assembly and disassembly capabilities.
Machine code monitors became popular during the home computer era of the 1970s and 1980s and were sometimes available as resident firmware in some computers (e.g., the built-in monitor in the Commodore 128).
Available software included a line-oriented machine code monitor, BASIC interpreter, assembler, Pascal, PL/65, and FORTH development system.
Additional features include BASIC extension, DOS Wedge, file manager, machine code monitor, fast loader, BIOS setup screen.
ROM "B" contained added Galaksija BASIC commands and functions (mostly trigonometric) as well as Z80 assembler and machine code monitor.
To counter the difficulty of keying a type-in, the MIKBUG machine code monitor for the Motorola 6800 of the late 1970s incorporated a checksum into its hexadecimal program listings.
While making music, he often programmed music directly, instead of using any music composition tools, using just a "machine code monitor"-and then an 'assembler' system/program-including SuperSoft's and then Commodore's tools.
A machine code monitor (aka machine language monitor) is software that allows a user to enter commands to view and change memory locations on a computer, with options to load and save memory contents from/to secondary storage.
MIKOS (mikro kazetový operační systém - micro cassette operating system) with better machine code monitor was stored in ROM, any other programming language was loaded from tape, using blocks of 255 data bytes.
The most common of these products are the Epyx FastLoad, the Final Cartridge, and the Action Replay plug-in ROM cartridges, which all have machine code monitor and disk editor software on board as well.
The Integer BASIC ROMs also included a machine code monitor, "mini-assembler", and disassembler that let programmers create and debug assembly language programs, and an interpreter for a 16-bit bytecode language called SWEET16.
However, the biggest strength of this particular cartridge for the Commodore 64 lies in the built-in machine code monitor program, which is capable of the widest range of features, such as text and sprite dump, as well as text and sprite editing.
While much of the first generation of C64 software used the standard BASIC, after 1983 almost all professionally produced programs were written in assembly language, either cross developed on a larger computer, or directly on the C64 using a machine code monitor or an assembler.