I don't know what all the db, dw, dd, things mean. I have tried to write this little script that does 1+1, stores it in a variable and then displays the result. Here is my code so far:
.386
.model flat, stdcall
option casemap :none
include \masm32\include\windows.inc
include \masm32\include\kernel32.inc
include \masm32\include\masm32.inc
includelib \masm32\lib\kernel32.lib
includelib \masm32\lib\masm32.lib
.data
num db ? ; set variable . Here is where I don't know what data type to use.
.code
start:
mov eax, 1 ; add 1 to eax register
mov ebx, 1 ; add 1 to ebx register
add eax, ebx ; add registers eax and ebx
push eax ; push eax into the stack
pop num ; pop eax into the variable num (when I tried it, it gave me an error, i think thats because of the data type)
invoke StdOut, addr num ; display num on the console.
invoke ExitProcess ; exit
end start
I need to understand what the db, dw, dd things mean and how they affect variable setting and combining and that sort of thing.
push eax
/pop [num]
is ridiculous. Justmov [num], eax
. Ormov dword [num], 1+1
to let the assembler do the 1+1 for you at assemble time, instead of run-time, and emit anmov m32, imm32
instruction encoding. (Thedword
size is needed because there's no register operand to infer the size from). Ormov eax, 1
/add eax, 1
.db
. For pointers, usedd
on 32-bit hardware (dq
on 64-bit hardware). Most often you're going to be usingdd
since you're using.386
as your CPU. But there are moments where you're going to want to use other types. Keep in mind that there is no enforcement of type rules in assembly at all. So the assembler won't stop you from loading data as the wrong type like a C compiler would.