0
    mov answ, 11
    lea bx, answ    ;scanf
    mov ah, 0ah
    int 21h


    cmp [bx], 79h
    JE L1

I don't understand why isn't it jumping to L1 even though I'm entering 'y' pls help me I'm new to x86 assembly programming.

3
  • 1
    I thought I'd point out a few things regarding your code: Since cmp mem,imm is ambigous it would be a good idea to write cmp byte [dx], 79h, or cmp byte ptr [dx],79h depending on the assembler used. Also, using 'y' as an immediate instead of 79h should be supported by any decent assembler, and makes the code much clearer.
    – Michael
    Jun 28, 2014 at 9:19
  • On x86 the 16 bit register dx, cx and ax can not be uses as an address register between brackets[]. Only bx, si, di, bp and sp and all of the 32 bit register on 386+. Jun 29, 2014 at 12:38
  • Usefull instructions are: "cmp byte[bx],79h" "cmp byte[si],79h" or "cmp byte[di],79h" ; compare the byte with DS:BX, DS:SI, or DS:DI Jun 29, 2014 at 12:50

1 Answer 1

0

0ah instruction accepts buffer at DS:DX, and populates it with entered chars. So you probably need

lea dx, answ
...
cmp [dx], 79h

Besides, buffer is populated with its length and other information, if you need to read just one char - use 07h - direct char input without echo. char will be put in AL

http://spike.scu.edu.au/~barry/interrupts.html#ah0a

2
  • I tried using lea dx,answ cmp[dx],79h but it doesn't work. Emu 8086 says that it is probably an undefined var, but doing this cmp answ[2] seems to work can you explain it to me? if you ever know why
    – PNC
    Jun 28, 2014 at 11:43
  • Oh, that's correct. cmp compares word, to compare with byte you would probably need cmpb. according to spec, answ[2] holds first byte of input string. answ[0] holds size of buffer, and answ[1] is actual number of chars stored in buffer.
    – Alexander
    Jun 28, 2014 at 12:02

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