Notational Conventions
iv
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Reference material provides supplementary information. This section
contains technical data about the internal format and structure of COFF
object files. It discusses symbolic debugging directives that the C compiler
uses. Finally, it includes hex conversion utility examples, assembler and
linker error messages, and a glossary.
Notational Conventions
This document uses the following conventions:
-
Program listings, program examples, and interactive displays appear in a
special typeface
. Examples use a
bold version
of the special
typeface for emphasis; interactive displays use a
bold version
of the
special typeface to distinguish commands that you enter from items that
the system displays (such as prompts, command output, error messages,
etc.).
Here is a sample program listing:
2 0001
2f
x .byte
47
3 0002
32
z
.byte
50
4 0003
.text
-
In syntax descriptions, the instruction, command, or directive is in a bold
typeface font and parameters are in an
italic typeface. Portions of a syntax
that are in bold should be entered as shown; portions of a syntax that are
in
italics describe the type of information that should be entered. Here is
an example of command line syntax:
abs500
filename
abs500 is a command. The command invokes the absolute lister and has
one parameter, indicated by
filename. When you invoke the absolute
lister, you supply the name of the file that the absolute lister uses as input.
-
Square brackets ( [ and ] ) identify an optional parameter. If you use an
optional parameter, you specify the information within the brackets; you
don’t enter the brackets themselves. This is an example of a command
that has an optional parameter:
hex500 [
–options] filename
The hex500 command has two parameters. The first parameter,
–options,
is optional. Since
options is plural, you may select several options. The
second parameter,
filename, is required.
How to Use This Manual / Notational Conventions
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