|
Post by christophertumber on Jun 22, 2014 21:34:34 GMT -5
Then booked time on a terminal to type it into the mini... Type? Bah, children! Load up the hopper to the card reader on the Wang.
|
|
|
Post by gauze on Jul 2, 2014 23:13:14 GMT -5
I use VIM (http://www.vim.org/download.php), it colour-codes 6809 asm but lacks code folding. :help fold
|
|
|
Post by D-Type on Mar 13, 2018 16:11:22 GMT -5
You kids today with your fancy pants IDEs! In my day we still use notepad and .bat files and we like it! In my first job, I used an editor called FRED aka "FRiendly EDitor", which worked on disk blocks of 64 characters by 16 = 1kb. Then it was MS-DOS Edit, Boxer DOS, TextPad on Windows, UltraEdit on Windows, plus vi on unix. Before that at Uni, it was vi or emacs. I'm most fond of Boxer and I'd be using it now, but it's a hassle having to setup DOSbox or vDOS to work with more than 80x25, so I'm currently using TextPad 6.5 as I have an old licence and I've created myself a nice syntax highlighting config. Sublime looks nice, as does MS Visual Studio Code. Maybe I'll install vim one day...
|
|
|
Post by gauze on Mar 13, 2018 22:36:48 GMT -5
re: VIM , get asm6809 syntax file if you do (google it)
|
|
|
Post by bob on Mar 14, 2018 8:16:30 GMT -5
Um, when I first learned programming we wrote the code out on a real notepad, with a pencil... Then booked time on a terminal to type it into the mini... God, i'm feeling old Well, I hand-wrote my programs and then typed up punch cards which I fed into the computer. So you're just a young whippersnapper. - Bob
|
|
|
Post by gauze on Feb 10, 2020 0:57:24 GMT -5
I use VIM (http://www.vim.org/download.php), it colour-codes 6809 asm but lacks code folding. I think you can set up a compiler with it but I have never done that as I use batch scripts from the command line. I'd just like to update this with everything I do to VIM to get it to display my vectrex asm files nice nice: download and install this syntax file: gist.github.com/ebonhand09/1190963/48b026ce8db0e53dc702942a76ef625f203e4223add this line to the top of every file, as comment: ; vim: syntax=asm6809 foldmethod=marker fdo-=search this enables the syntax file, sets fold method to marker (more on that later) and makes search not open folds when it finds one inside the fold. now you have to set up code folding manually but it's simple, just add: ;{{{ comment CODE HERE ;}}} and when you press 'zo' over a fold it opens it, and 'zc' closes it. here's an example of what my functions.i file looks like with all the code folded up:
|
|
|
Post by playvectrex on Jun 2, 2020 22:43:49 GMT -5
I use Sublime Text 3 with the Monokai+ theme and the "Assembly 6809 and 6309 Syntax Highlighting.sublime-package". It has code folding and tons of other features I can't live without, and looks beautiful. g.recordit.co/ZRtFFcfBVH.gif (code folding GIF)
|
|