Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!coplex!disk!corpane!herman From: herman@corpane.uucp (Harry Herman) Newsgroups: comp.sys.handhelds Subject: Re: Questions about hp48 machine language Keywords: hp48, machine language, ml Message-ID: <1991May01.222451.563@corpane.uucp> Date: 1 May 91 22:24:51 GMT References: <42247@netnews.upenn.edu> <15427@life.ai.mit.edu> <281de91c: 2970.2comp.sys.handhelds;1@hpcvbbs.UUCP> <15465@life.ai.mit.edu> Organization: Corpane Industries Inc. Lines: 30 In <15465@life.ai.mit.edu> bson@rice-chex.ai.mit.edu (Jan Brittenson) writes: >In a posting of [30 Apr 91 22:40:19 GMT] > akcs.falco@hpcvbbs.UUCP (Andrey Dolgachev) writes: > > Jan, for those of us who don't have STAR, could you please also post > > you your machine-code routines in a format which can be simply d/l'd > > and ASC-> ed? > Hmm... it took me a while, but I finally think I know what you are >refering to. Some guy at U Penn asked how to create kermit headers and >code objects with STAR. What I provided was a skeleton to be filled in >with the actual code. The skeleton doesn't do anything by itself, and >was intended only as an example. I apologize for not making this clear >in the message. > -- Jan Brittenson > bson@ai.mit.edu Jan, I suspect he may have been talking about your machine code examples for things like the keyboard buffer routines you posted a couple of weeks ago. They are apparantly written in STAR and for those of us who do not have STAR and don't want to hand assemble the routines, having ASC-> files available would be nice. Harry Herman herman@corpane