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The assembly part of a compiler is at the back end of the build process. A build process takes instructions from a programming language and converts them into machine instructions. When you need to make machine instructions for a machine that is different than the type you are programming on you need a cross compiler. For instance, if you have a PC with an Intel X86 and you want machine instructions for an Xbox with a PowerPC inside then you would need to cross compile. You could take some intermediate output from your compilation process on the PC and use a cross assembler to make PowerPC instructions. Thus you would be using a cross assembler.
One well known and good assembler is NASM. (Netwide ASseMbler). This can be found at http://nasm.sf.net
An assembler which runs on a computer for which it produces object codes
An absolute assembler is a computing term for an assembler which generates code which uses only absolute addresses.
There are several examples of assemblers: GAS - the GNU Assembler MASM - Microsoft Macro Assembler NASM - Netwide Assembler The assembler is the program which converts assembly code into machine code - a necessary step to prepare a program for execution.
Meta-assembler is a program that accepts the syntactic and semantic description of an assembly language, and generates an assembler for that language.
Meta-assembler is a program that accepts the syntactic and semantic description of an assembly language, and generates an assembler for that language.
Assembly langue is translated into machine language by an assembler.
i don't know what is the work of cross assembler?
what is the difference between an assembler and the translator