Assembly Language StepbyStep Programming with DOS and Linux 2nd Ed [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Assembly Language StepbyStep Programming with DOS and Linux 2nd Ed [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Jeff Duntemann

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POP Pop Top of Stack into Operand




Flags affected:



O D I T S Z A P C OF: Overflow flag TF: Trap flag AF: Aux carry
F F F F F F F F F DF: Direction flag SF: Sign flag PF: Parity flag
<none> IF: Interrupt flag ZF: Zero flag CF: Carry flag


Legal forms:



POP r16
POP m16
POP r32
POP m32
POP sr


Examples:



POP WORD [BX]
POP EAX
POP DX
POP DWORD [EAX+ECX]
POP ES


Notes:


It is impossible to pop an 8-bit item from the stack. Also remember that the top of the stack is defined (in 16-bit modes) as the word at address SS:SP, and there's no way to override that using prefixes. In 32-bit modes, the top of the stack is the DWORD at [ESP]. There is a separate pair of instructions, PUSHF and POPF, for pushing and popping the Flags register.

All register forms have single-byte opcodes. NASM recognizes them and generates them automatically, even though there are larger forms in the CPU instruction decoding logic.


r8 = AL AH BL BH CL CH DL DH r16 = AX BX CX DX BP SP SI DI
sr = CS DS SS ES FS GS r32 = EAX EBX ECX EDX EBP ESP ESI EDI
m8 = 8-bit memory data m16 = 16-bit memory data
m32 = 32-bit memory data i8 = 8-bit immediate data
i16 = 16-bit immediate data i32 = 32-bit immediate data
d8 = 8-bit signed displacement d16 = 16-bit signed displacement
d32 = 32-bit unsigned displacement


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