Zilog Z80 CPU Assembler Syntax

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Transcript Zilog Z80 CPU Assembler Syntax

Zilog Z80 CPU Assembler
Syntax
Microprocessor and Interface II
Eko Henfri B
Mnemonic - 1
ADC
ADD WITH CARRY
ADD
ADD
AND
LOGICAL AND
BIT
BIT TEST
CALL
CALL SUB ROUTINE
CCF
COMPLEMENT CARRY FLAG
CP
COMPARE
CPD
COMPARE AND DECREMENT
CPDR
COMPARE DECREMENT AND REPEAT
CPI
COMPARE AND INCREMENT
CPIR
COMPARE INCREMENT AND REPEAT
CPL
COMPLEMENT ACCUMULATOR
DAA
DECIMAL ADJUST ACCUMULATOR
DEC
DECREMENT
DI
DISABLE INTERRUPTS
Mnemonic - 2
DJNZ
DEC JUMP NON-ZERO
EI
ENABLE INTERRUPTS
EX
EXCHANGE REGISTER PAIR
EXX
EXCHANGE ALTERNATE REGISTERS
HALT
HALT, WAIT FOR INTERRUPT OR RESET
IM
INTERRUPT MODE 0 1 2
IN
INPUT FROM PORT
INC
INCREMENT
IND
INPUT, DEC HL, DEC B
INDR
INPUT, DEC HL, DEC B, REPEAT IF B>0
INI
INPUT, INC HL, DEC B
INIR
INPUT, INC HL, DEC B, REPEAT IF B>0
JP
JUMP
JR
JUMP RELATIVE
LD
LOAD DATA TO/FROM
REGISTERS/MEMORY
Mnemonic - 3
LDD
LOAD DECREMENT
LDDR
LOAD DECREMENT AND REPEAT
LDI
LOAD AND INCREMENT
LDIR
LOAD INCREMENT AND REPEAT
NEG
NEGATE ACCUMULATOR 2'S
COMPLEMENT
NOP
NO OPERATION
OR
--
OTDR
OUTPUT, DEC HL, DEC B, REPEAT IF B>0
OTIR
OUTPUT, INC HL, DEC B, REPEAT IF B>0
OUT
OUTPUT TO PORT
OUTD
OUTPUT, DEC HL, DEC B
OUTI
OUTPUT, INC HL, DEC B
POP
POP FROM STACK
PUSH
PUSH INTO STACK
RES
RESET BIT
Mnemonic - 4
RET
RETURN FROM SUB ROUTINE
RETI
RETURN FROM INTERRUPT
RETN
RETURN FROM NON MASKABEL
INTERRUPT
RL
ROTATE LEFT register
RLA
ROTATE LEFT ACUMULATOR
RLC
ROTATE LEFT THROUGH CARRY register
RLCA
ROTATE LEFT THROUGH CARRY
ACCUMULATUR
RLD
ROTATE LEFT DIGIT
RR
ROTATE RIGHT register
RRA
ROTATE RIGHT ACCUMULATOR
RRC
ROTATE RIGHT CIRCULAR register
RRCA
ROTATE RIGHT CIRCULAR
ACCUMULATOR
RRD
ROTATE RIGHT DIGIT
RST
RESTART
SBC
SUBTRACT WITH CARRY
Mnemonic - 5
SCF
SET CARRY FLAG
SET
SET BIT
SLA
SHIFT LEFT ARITHMETIC register
SRA
SHIFT RIGHT ARITHMETIC register
SRL
SHIFT RIGHT LOGICAL register
SUB
SUBTRACTION
XOR
EXCLUSIVE OR
Instruction Summary - 1
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
Description
Notes
ADC A,s
***V0*
Add with Carry
A=A+s+CY
ADC HL,ss
**?V0*
Add with Carry
HL=HL+ss+CY
ADD A,s
***V0*
Add
A=A+s
ADD HL,ss
--?-0*
Add
HL=HL+ss
ADD IX,pp
--?-0*
Add
IX=IX+pp
ADD IY,rr
--?-0*
Add
IY=IY+rr
AND s
***P00
Logical AND
A=A&s
BIT b,m
?*1?0-
Test Bit
m&{2^b}
CALL cc,nn
------
Conditional Call
If cc CALL
CALL nn
------
Unconditional Call
-[SP]=PC,PC=nn
CCF
--?-0*
Complement Carry Flag
CY=~CY
CP s
***V1*
Compare
A-s
CPD
****1-
Compare and Decrement
A-[HL],HL=HL-1,BC=BC-1
CPDR
****1-
Compare, Dec., Repeat
CPD till A=[HL]or BC=0
CPI
****1-
Compare and Increment
A-[HL],HL=HL+1,BC=BC-1
CPIR
****1-
Compare, Inc., Repeat
CPI till A=[HL]or BC=0
CPL
--1-1-
Complement
A=~A
Instruction Summary - 2
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
Description
Notes
DAA
***P-*
Decimal Adjust Acc.
A=BCD format
DEC s
***V1-
Decrement
s=s-1
DEC xx
------
Decrement
xx=xx-1
DEC ss
------
Decrement
ss=ss-1
DI
------
Disable Interrupts
DJNZ e
------
Dec., Jump Non-Zero
EI
------
Enable Interrupts
EX [SP],HL
------
Exchange
[SP]<->HL
EX [SP],xx
------
Exchange
[SP]<->xx
EX AF,AF'
------
Exchange
AF<->AF'
EX DE,HL
------
Exchange
DE<->HL
EXX
------
Exchange
qq<->qq'
HALT
------
Halt
IM n
------
Interrupt Mode
IN A,[n]
------
Input
A=[n]
IN r,[C]
***P0-
Input
r=[C]
INC r
***V0-
Increment
r=r+1
B=B-1 till B=0
(except AF)
(n=0,1,2)
Instruction Summary - 3
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
Description
Notes
INC [HL]
***V0-
Increment
[HL]=[HL]+1
INC xx
------
Increment
xx=xx+1
INC [xx+d]
***V0-
Increment
[xx+d]=[xx+d]+1
INC ss
------
Increment
ss=ss+1
IND
?*??1-
Input and Decrement
[HL]=[C],HL=HL-1,B=B-1
INDR
?1??1-
Input, Dec., Repeat
IND till B=0
INI
?*??1-
Input and Increment
[HL]=[C],HL=HL+1,B=B-1
INIR
?1??1-
Input, Inc., Repeat
INI till B=0
JP [HL]
------
Unconditional Jump
PC=[HL]
JP [xx]
------
Unconditional Jump
PC=[xx]
JP nn
------
Unconditional Jump
PC=nn
JP cc,nn
------
Conditional Jump
If cc JP
JR e
------
Unconditional Jump
PC=PC+e
JR cc,e
------
Conditional Jump
If cc JR(cc=C,NC,NZ,Z)
LD dst,src
------
Load
dst=src
LD A,i
**0*0-
Load
A=i
LDD
--0*0-
Load and Decrement
[DE]=[HL],HL=HL-1,#
(i=I,R)
Instruction Summary - 4
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
Description
Notes
LDDR
--000-
Load, Dec., Repeat
LDD till BC=0
LDI
--0*0-
Load and Increment
[DE]=[HL],HL=HL+1,#
LDIR
--000-
Load, Inc., Repeat
LDI till BC=0
NEG
***V1*
Negate
A=-A
NOP
------
No Operation
OR s
***P00
Logical inclusive OR
A=Avs
OTDR
?1??1-
Output, Dec., Repeat
OUTD till B=0
OTIR
?1??1-
Output, Inc., Repeat
OUTI till B=0
OUT [C],r
------
Output
[C]=r
OUT [n],A
------
Output
[n]=A
OUTD
?*??1-
Output and Decrement
[C]=[HL],HL=HL-1,B=B-1
OUTI
?*??1-
Output and Increment
[C]=[HL],HL=HL+1,B=B-1
POP xx
------
Pop
xx=[SP]+
POP qq
------
Pop
qq=[SP]+
PUSH xx
------
Push
-[SP]=xx
PUSH qq
------
Push
-[SP]=qq
RES b,m
------
Reset bit
m=m&{~2^b}
Instruction Summary - 5
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
Description
Notes
RET
------
Return
PC=[SP]+
RET cc
------
Conditional Return
If cc RET
RETI
------
Return from Interrupt
PC=[SP]+
RETN
------
Return from NMI
PC=[SP]+
RL m
**0P0*
Rotate Left
m={CY,m}<-
RLA
--0-0*
Rotate Left Acc.
A={CY,A}<-
RLC m
**0P0*
Rotate Left Circular
m=m<-
RLCA
--0-0*
Rotate Left Circular
A=A<-
RLD
**0P0-
Rotate Left 4 bits
{A,[HL]}={A,[HL]}<- ##
RR m
**0P0*
Rotate Right
m=->{CY,m}
RRA
--0-0*
Rotate Right Acc.
A=->{CY,A}
RRC m
**0P0*
Rotate Right Circular
m=->m
RRCA
--0-0*
Rotate Right Circular
A=->A
RRD
**0P0-
Rotate Right 4 bits
{A,[HL]}=->{A,[HL]} ##
RST p
------
Restart
SBC A,s
***V1*
Subtract with Carry
A=A-s-CY
SBC HL,ss
**?V1*
Subtract with Carry
HL=HL-ss-CY
(p=0H,8H,10H,...,38H)
Instruction Summary - 6
Mnemonic
SZHPNC
SCF
-1
Description
Notes
Set Carry Flag
CY=1
SET b,m
------
Set bit
m=mv{2^b}
SLA m
**0P0*
Shift Left Arithmetic
m=m*2
SRA m
**0P0*
Shift Right Arith.
m=m/2
SRL m
**0P0*
Shift Right Logical
m=->{0,m,CY}
SUB s
***V1*
Subtract
A=A-s
XOR s
***P00
Logical Exclusive OR
A=Axs
Note (Flag Bits)
F
*
0
1
?
Flag unaffected
Affected
Reset
Set
unknown
S
S
Sign flag (Bit 7)
Z
HC
P/V
N
CY
Z
Zero flag (Bit 6)
H
Half Carry flag (Bit 4)
Parity/Overflow flag (Bit 2,
V=overflow)
P
N
Add/Subtract flag (Bit 1)
C
Carry flag (Bit 0)
Note (Data Adressing)
n
Immediate addressing
nn
Immediate extended addressing
e
Relative addressing (PC=PC+2+offset)
[nn]
Extended addressing
[xx+d]
Indexed addressing
r
Register addressing
[rr]
Register indirect addressing
Implied addressing
b
Bit addressing
p
Modified page zero addressing (see RST)
Note (Data Definition)
DEFB n(,...)
Define Byte(s)
DEFB 'str'(,...)
Define Byte ASCII string(s)
DEFS nn
Define Storage Block
DEFW nn(,...)
Define Word(s)
Note (Registers)
A B C D E
Registers (8-bit)
AF BC DE HL
Register pairs (16-bit)
F
Flag register (8-bit)
I
Interrupt page address register (8-bit)
IX IY
Index registers (16-bit)
PC
Program Counter register (16-bit)
R
Memory Refresh register
SP
Stack Pointer register (16-bit)
Note (Data and Registers)
b
One bit (0 to 7)
cc
Condition (C,M,NC,NZ,P,PE,PO,Z)
d
One-byte expression (-128 to +127)
dst
Destination s, ss, [BC], [DE], [HL], [nn]
e
One-byte expression (-126 to +129)
m
Any register r, [HL] or [xx+d]
n
One-byte expression (0 to 255)
nn
Two-byte expression (0 to 65535)
pp
Register pair BC, DE, IX or SP
qq
Register pair AF, BC, DE or HL
qq'
Alternative register pair AF, BC, DE or HL
r
Register A, B, C, D, E, H or L
rr
Register pair BC, DE, IY or SP
s
Any register r, value n, [HL] or [xx+d]
src
Source s, ss, [BC], [DE], [HL], nn, [nn]
ss
Register pair BC, DE, HL or SP
xx
Index register IX or IY
Additional Note
+ - * / ^
Add/subtract/multiply/divide/exponent
& ~ v x
Logical AND/NOT/inclusive OR/exclusive OR
<- ->
Rotate left/right
[]
Indirect addressing
[ ]+ -[ ]
Indirect addressing auto-increment/decrement
{}
Combination of operands
#
Also BC=BC-1,DE=DE-1
##
Only lower 4 bits of accumulator A used
LD Instruction
The first thing you will want to do is to load a value into a register.
This is done with the LD instruction. Here are some examples:
ld a,0
; loads the value0 into register a
ld b,2
; loads the value 2 into register b
ld de,257 ; loads the value 257 into register de
;(same as loading 1 into d and 1 into e)
ld d,$0A ; NOTE $8A represents a HEX number,
; %00100100 represents a BIN number,
; 52 just a decimal number.
; this loads $0A into d, $0A is the same as 10
ld a,d
; loads the current value of d into a (in this
case 10)
NOTE:
An 8-bit regiser can only hold the values from 0-255 (%00000000%11111111),but a 16 bit register can hold the values 0-65535.
The register HL, is primarily used for ADDRESSING, This means it usually
points to another memory location. The video Memory is located at $FC00, so
to have hl "point" to the video memory you use the command:
ld hl,$FC00 ;loads the value $FC00 into register hl
Now, to copy a value into the memory location that HL is pointing to, we do
something called indirect addressing.
ld a,%10101010
ld (hl),a
ld a,(hl)
;loads thevalue %10101010 into reg. a
;loads the value %10101010 into the
;memory location that hl "points" to
;the value of HL is $fc00 therefore
;the value %10101010 is loaded into
;memory location $fc00, which happens
;to be the video memory :)
;IT DOES NOT CHANGE THE VALUE OF HL!!
;similiarly this loads the value at
;mem location $fc00 into the reg. a
ADD/SUB
The next thing to learn, is how to add and subtract from a register. To do this we
use the instructions ADD and SUB.
add
add
add
add
a,##
hl,ss (where ss = bc,de,hl, or sp)
ix,pp (where pp = bc,de,ix, or sp)
iy,rr (where rr = bc,de,iy, or sp)
These are the only ways that ADD can be used. ex:
ld a,8
add a,10
ld hl,$FC00
ld bc,$00BB
add hl,FCBB
;a=8
;a=a+10 a=18
;hl = $FC00
;bc = $00BB
;hl=hl+bc hl = $fcbb
ADD
In order to add anything to the other registers, you must do it indIrectly:]
ld b,8
ld a,b
add a,5
ld b,a
;or
ld bc,46
ld h,b
ld l,c
ld bc,52
add hl,bc
ld b,h
ld c,l
;b=8
;a=b
;a='b+5'
;b='b+5'
;bc=46
;you can't do'ld hl,bc'
;
;
;hl = bc+52
;.
;bc =bc+52
SUB
Now you know how to add, what about subtracting?
sub ##
; a=a-##
That's it! you can only SUB from a (the accumulator), therefore all other
subtractions must be made indirectly. Here are some examples:
ld a,16
sub 5
ld b,65
ld a,b
sub 6
ld b,a
;a=16
;a=a-5, a=11
;b=65
;a=65
;a=65-6, a=59
;b=59
ADD and SUB let you add or subtract any number, however if you only want to
add or subtract the value 1 then you can use INC/DEC
INC/DEC
inc
inc
dec
dec
r
ss
r
ss
;(where r=a,b,c,d,e,h,orl)
;(where ss=bc,de,hl, or sp)
These are the ony cases we will use. Here are some examples:
ld a,5
inc a
ld b,a
dec b
ld bc,568
inc bc
inc bc
;a=5
;a=a+1, a=6
;b=a, b=6
;b=b-1, b=5
;bc=568
;bc=bc+1, bc=569
;bc=bc+1, bc=570
PUSH
To add an item to the stack we use the PUSH instruction. You can only PUSH
the following registers:
AF, BC, DE, HL, IX, IY
Here are some examples:
push af
;adds the valuestored in AF to the stack
push bc
;adds the value storedin BC to the stack
NOTE:
The register still contains the value it had before being PUSHED
It is very important that you DON'T exit the program before POPPING, all
PUSHED values.
POP
To remove anitem from the stack we use the POP instruction. You can only
POP to the following registers:
AF, BC, DE, HL
Here are some examples:
pop af
pop bc
;stores the value on the top of the
;stack in AF (removes that value from the
stack)
;stores the value on the top of the
;stack in BC (removes that value from the
stack)
LABELS
Labels area way to define a certain area in the program. To define labels, you
must first enter the name of the label then a ":".
Here are some examples:
loop:
; this is a label
ld a,5
push af
;just somestuff
push bc
inc a
anotherlabel: ; this is another label
NOTE: Labels cannotbe indented!
JR
The ASM code is always processed sequently, one instruction after the
next. However, if you want to skip to a certain part of the code, or go back and
repeat a previous portion you must jump there. There are 2 different ways to
JUMP to another part of code. JR, and JP. There are a few differences that are
discussed later, but they are VERY IMPORTANT!
To jump to a certain part of code you must enter JR LABELNAME. Here are
some examples:
ld a,1
MyLabel:
inc a
jr MyLabel
;a=1
;LABEL
;a=a+1
;jump to LABEL
NOTE:
This code willcause an infinite loop.
The code between 'MyLabel' and 'jr MyLabel‘ will be repeated over and
over.
JP
The ASM code is always processed sequently, one instruction after the
next. However, if you want to skip to a certain part of the code, or back to a
previous portion you must jump there. There are 2 different ways to JUMP to
another part of code. JR, and JP.
There are a few differences that are discussed later, but they're VERY
IMPORTANT!
To jump to a certain part of code you must enter JP LABELNAME. Here are
some examples:
ld a,1
;a=1
MyLabel:
;LABEL
inc a
;a=a+1
jp MyLabel ;jump to LABEL
In order to make jumps ONLY IF certain requirements are met, we use the
following conditionals:
C
NC
Z
NZ
M
P
PE
PO
(Carry)
(No Carry)
(Zero)
(Not Zero)
(Minus)
(Positive)
(Parity Even)
(Parity Odd)
You can already see some differences between JR and JP.
JP allows the use of 4 more conditions! These conditions are based on how the
F register is set. Remember it is the FLAG register. Here're some examples:
ld a,5
;a=5
Loop:
;MyLOOP Label
dec a
;a=a-1
jp p,Loop ;if A is positive then jumpto Loop.
;(When the value of A changes F is ALWAYS
updated)
This loop will execute 6 times (a=5,4,3,2,1,0.
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN JR/JP
The Main difference between the 2 types of jumps (jr, jp) is the JR is
a RELETIVE jump.
When translated into machine code it essential says 'jump this many bytes
forward/backward', for this reason, it has a limited range. If you plan on jumping
further then the range allowed by JR you MUST use JP.
JP is an ABSOLUTE jump. When translated into machine code it basicallysays
'jump to this location'. The advantage of JR over JP is bothsize and speed in
the final compiled program.
Another difference, which we have already seenis that JP allows you to use
more conditions. JR does not support P, M, PO, or PE.
DJNZ
DJNZ is a very helpful instruction. It combines the [DEC -> JP nz, label] sequence
used so often in loops.
ld b,15 ;b=15, the number of times for the loop to execute
Loop:
; all the cool loop stuff inside of here
djnz Loop
;b=b-1, jump is b is NotZero
NOTE: DJNZ always uses the register B. It decrements B, checks if B is nz, if so
then jumps to the label. If the value of B is changed inside your loop code
remember to use PUSH/POP so your values is not destroyed.
ld a,0
ld b,15
Loop:
push bc ;adds it to the stack
ld b,4
;b=4
add a,b ;a=a+b, a=a+4
pop bc
;gets our value of Bback!
djnz Loop
CP
CP simply sets the FLAG register (F) based on the subtraction (A-s)
CP S (where S = A,F,B,C,D,E,H,L,#,(hl),(iy+#),or (ix+#))
IF... THEN... ELSE
To achieve an IF... THEN... ELSE statement(s) you must use a CP call followed
by a JR, JP, or any other instruction that has conditionals (ret, call, ...) Here are
some examples:
ld b,5
ld a,5
;b=5
;a=5
cp b
;set flags based on (a-b)
jr z,AequalsB ;if a=b -> a-b=0,therefore
;if the Zero flag is set JUMP to AequalsB
:
.
AequalsB: ;
:
.
You can also string them together like this:
ld b,6 ;.
ld c,5 ;.
ld a,5 ;Set the init values
cp
jr
cp
jr
jr
b
;IF a=b
z,AB ;THEN goto AB
c
;IF a=c
z,AC ;THEN goto AC
NONE ;ELSE goto NONE (if it didn'tjump one of the other
; times then it must be an ELSE, NOTE:no conditia
; listed. Just a straight 'jr NONE')
:
.
AB::
.
AC:
:
.
NONE:
GREATER THAN, and LESS THAN:
Compare A and B for =, < and >
LD B, 7
LD A, 5
CP B
; Flags = status(A-B)
JP Z, A_Equal_To_B
; IF(a-b)=0 THEN a=b
JP NC, A_Greater_Than_B ; IF(a-b)>0 THEN a>b
JP C, A_Lower_Than_B
; IF(a-b)<0 THEN a<b
A_Greater_Than_B:
(...)
JP end_compare
A_Lower_Than_B:
(...)
JP end_compare
A_Equal_To_B:
(...)
end_compare:
RET
CALL
Call allows you to jump to a different location in the ASM program, while saving
where it was, so it can return to that location later.
CALL cc,LABEL
(where cc=c,nc,z,nz,p,m,pe,orpo)
If the condition cc is true then it jumps to the label.
CC is OPTIONAL.
call _clrLCD
call z,_clrLCD
; calls the ROM function to clear the LCD
; only calls the function if the Zeroflag
is set
RET
RET, returns power back to where the last CALL statement was made, or back the
TI/OS-SHELL, if no CALLs where made. It's actually similar to the stack, but it's
easier to explain it this way.
RET cc
(where cc=c,nc,z,nz,p,m,pe,or po)
If cc is true then the ret is executed. CC is OPTIONAL
FUNCTIONS
Putting the CALL and RET commands together you are given a powerful way to
modulate your programs. You can create functions that perform certain tasks
and even accept input and produce output. ld a,5
call Add3
ld c,b
:
.
Add3:
ld b,a
inc b
inc b
inc b
ret
; calls our function Add3which adds 3 to the
reg. A
; and stores the new value in B
; NOW b=a+3, or 8
; c=b, c=8
;b=a
;
;
;b=a+3
;returns control to next line after CALL was
made.