Programming with Ophis | ||
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Now that we have our header information, let's actually write the "Hello world" program. It's pretty short—a simple loop that steps through a hardcoded array until it reaches a 0 or outputs 256 characters. It then returns control to BASIC with an RTS statement.
Each character in the array is passed as an argument to a subroutine at memory location $FFD2. This is part of the Commodore 64's BIOS software, which its development documentation calls the KERNAL. Location $FFD2 prints out the character corresponding to the character code in the accumulator.
ldx #0 loop: lda hello, x beq done jsr $ffd2 inx bne loop done: rts hello: .byte "HELLO, WORLD!", 0 |
The complete, final source is available in the hello1.oph file.
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