What are your favourite assemblers, compilers, environments, interpreters for the good old ZX Spectrum?
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I always used to use Roybot Assembler - which had you enter your program using the BASIC editor and REM statements. It comes with a decent debugger/disassembler that lets you single-step machine code too. The Hisoft Gens and Mons assembler and disassembler (aka Devpak) are probably fairly popular. For high-level compiling, the Mira Modula-2 compiler is very good. |
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Just programming in BASIC, the commands are right there on those rubbery keys. Now if only PC's could have key-legends with while, case, switch etc. on them :-) |
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I used to type in hex-tables from a magazine and then a a short basic application to unpack the data into assembly code -- couldn't make head nor tale of it for ages until I discovered I wasn't actually coding at all! I then moved onto Z80 assembly on a College owned CPM mini system. Programming the Speccy was never the same after that and I never went back! |
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Devpac (a blue cassette) comes to my mind, even after all these years. Sure, it was #1. I don't miss the cassette loadings, though. Nice question!!! :D http://www.clive.nl/detail/22916/ I think I had v.3. It sure looked much more home-made than the this pic. But it worked and didn't have a single bug. Beat that, current software!!! |
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ZX ASM 3.0 It had the best user interface and good feature set compared to other assemblers at the end of the twentieth century. |
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Well outside of GEN80, HiSoft Pascal and Hisoft C were pretty impressive. proper high level languages, way cool. Before I learnt Z80, and was frustrated by the speed of BASIC, I also loved MCODER, though more on the ZX81 than spectrum. |
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ZX-Asm v3.1 + patched HiSoft-C v1.1 / figFORTH / BetaBasic 3.0 |
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There are some good PC-based packages too. For Sinclair BASIC based development the excellent BASin package for Windows gives you a good syntax highlighter, runtime virtual machine, built-in editors for fonts and UDG's etc. |
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Zeus assembler, was the best. I'd add a couple of the Spectrum books in there if I could remember the names, still have them at home. One was something like the Complete ROM disassembly, which was commented and described as if it was the source, a fantastic piece of reverse engineering, including a suggested bug fix for the know ROM bugs. If only flash memory had been around in those days. I also memorised a tiny book called the Z80 Workshop Manual which was a great summary of the processor. |
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Assembler Prometheus from Proxima Software. |
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Hisoft Gens and Mons assembler and disassembler for programming/debugging. The Artist / The Art Studio for graphics: The Music Box for sound: |
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