there are five addressing modes in 8086
they are :
1->direct addressing
2->Indirect addressing
3->index addressing
4->immediate addressing
5->register addressing
Addressing Modes on the 8086
The x86 instructions use five different operand types: registers, constants, and three memory addressing schemes. Each form is called an addressing mode. The x86 processors support
the register addressing mode ,
the immediate addressing mode,
the direct addressing mode,
the indirect addressing mode,
the base plus index addressing mode,
the register relative addressing mode,
and the base relative plus index addressing mode.
You need an 8086 assembly language pencil.
write program to concatenating two sting in 8086 assembly language
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Assembly
alp for lcm of a no
No. The 8086 has instructions not present in the 8085. The 8086 was marketed as "source compatible" with the 8085, meaning that there was a translator program which could convert assembly language code for the 8085 into assembly language code for the 8086. However, this does not mean that the compiled 8086 assembly code would then run on an 8085; among other things, the 8086 was a true 16-bit processor, as opposed to the 8085 which was an 8-bit processor that supported a few 16-bit operations.
Yes.
There isn't a reason to write a complete program to do this; in any assembly language just shift the value 1 bit to the left to double it.
indexed addressing
No, you need a real teacher, and a textbook.
Assembly language programe for multiplication