Assembly Language
The Ultimate Guide to Programming and Virtual Machines
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Narrated by:
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Kevin Brooker
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Written by:
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Jonathan Rigdon
About this listen
Assembly language is often considered a bridge between high-level programming languages and machine code. Unlike high-level languages such as Python or C, which use human-readable syntax and abstract away many details of the underlying hardware, assembly language provides a more direct representation of the CPU's operations.
Each assembly language instruction corresponds to a specific operation that the CPU can perform, such as loading data from memory, performing arithmetic calculations, or branching based on conditions. These instructions are typically represented using mnemonic codes, which are easier for humans to understand compared to the binary machine code instructions that the CPU actually executes.
One of the key benefits of programming in assembly language is the level of control it provides over hardware resources. Because assembly language instructions map closely to CPU operations, programmers can fine-tune their code to optimize performance or interact directly with hardware peripherals.
©2024 Jonathan Rigdon (P)2024 Jonathan Rigdon