As I write thes, there are 85 paid subscribers! I sent out about 140 flyers in the last two weeks, so maybe the number will double again next month!  Pass the word to your friends and local Apple clubs ... and let me know how you like the content, style, et cetera.


In this issue...

Intelligent Disassemblers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Integer BASIC Pretty Lister . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Listed Expressions with .DA Directive . . . . . . . . . . 9
Block MOVE and COPY for Version 4.0 . . . . . . . . . .  11
Handling 16-Bit Comparisons . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16


Quarterly Disk #1

If you find there just isn't enough time to type in all the source programs in the Apple Assembly Line, I will be happy to save you the trouble.  Every three months I will put together a "Disk of the Quarter" which contains all the source in the format of the S-C ASSEMBLER II Version 4.0.  The price is only $15, and I will pay the postage.

The first such disk is ready now, covering October, November, and December of 1980.  The disks and the programs are for subscribers only.  Save your fingers, get yours now!


Help for Beginners

I will write some beginner's material from time to time for this newsletter, but I cannot cover every base at once.  Meanwhile, many of the magazines and club newsletters are beginning to publish articles for beginners who want to learn assembly language.  One of the best and most accessible is Creative Computing.  Chuck Carpenter's "Apple-Cart", a monthly feature, in the November, 1980 issue, was great!  He actually began the subject of machine language in the October issue, but in the November one he covered indexing, indirect addressing, and interrupts.  By the way, Chuck is also a subscriber to the Apple Assembly Line.

There have also been some good beginner articles in recent copies of Nibble and Softalk.  Nibble has been printing a lot of assembly language programs, which are good to study.
