Both tools translate assembly instructions directly into machine code, but is it possible to determine which one produces the fastest and cleanest code?
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When you're writing in assembler, you are precisely describing the instructions to generate so it doesn't depend on the assembler. It depends on you. There's a one-to-one correspondence between the mnemonics you write and actual instructions in machine code. |
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I don't know about these two specific tools, but there are some instructions that can be encoded differently:
These are just a few examples off the top of my head of how assemblers can encode the same instruction differently, so the question does in fact make sense. |
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As a sidenote on the syntax-matter. You can have GAS work perfectly fine with Intel syntax by putting the following line at the top of your source file:
I am using Intel syntax too for all my assmebly needs. It seems far more natural than the AT&T syntax. And it saves some keystrokes :-). |
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It is assember... it does not optimize code. It just translates as is. So the fastest and cleanest code is produced by programmer or compiler |
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Obviously nasm because Intel syntax looks much cleaner than AT&T syntax. |
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@Brian: that was not the question ... @cyber98834: Well, an assembler does what every assembler must do : translate every instruction to its opcode . There's no optimization . Oh and also, there's not such a thing as a "fastest code" ... Can I ask you a question ? The CPU's speed is static, isn't it ? So, you can't make a code run faster because you can't change the CPU's speed . But, you can shrink the code so that the CPU handles less amount of instructions, and so takes less time to run . I hope you understand what I'm trying to say . I suggest you to buy ( or to look for some pdf's, but I don't know if that's legal ) Michael Abrash's Graphics Programming Black Book which covers many optimization lessons . |
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