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Using 8080/LR35902/Z80 assembly within Millfork programs

There are two ways to include raw assembly code in your Millfork programs:

Assembly syntax

By default, Millfork uses Zilog syntax for Z80 and LR35902 assembly and Intel syntax for Intel 8080/8085 assembly. This can be overridden per file by a pragma directive or by several other means. Using both kinds of syntax in one file is not supported.

Indexing via the IX/IY register uses the following syntax: IX(1)

LR35902 instructions that load/store the accumulator indirectly via HL and then increment/decrement HL are written LD A,(HLI), LD, A,(HLD), LD (HLI),A and LD (HLD),A

LR35902 instructions for faster access to the $FFxx addresses use the LDH mnemonic: LDH A,(4), LDH (C),A etc.

Only instructions available on the current CPU architecture are available. Intel syntax does not support instructions that are unavailable on the 8080. Undocumented Z80 instructions are not supported, except for SLL.

Labels have to be followed by a colon and they can optionally be on a separate line. Indentation is not important:

// Zilog syntax
first:  INC a
second: 
        INC b
INC c

// Intel syntax
first:  INR a
second: 
        INR b
INR c

Label names have to start with a letter and can contain digits, underscores and letters. This means than they cannot start with a period like in many other assemblers. Similarly, anonymous labels designated with + or - are also not supported.

Assembly can refer to variables and constants defined in Millfork, but you need to be careful with using absolute vs immediate addressing:

const byte fiveConstant = 5
byte fiveVariable = 5

byte ten() {
    byte result
    asm {
        // Zilog syntax
        LD A, (fiveVariable)  // not LD A,fiveVariable
        ADD A,fiveConstant
        LD (result), A

        // Intel syntax
        LDA fiveVariable  // not MVI A,fiveVariable
        ADD fiveConstant
        STA result
    }
    return result
}

Any assembly opcode can be prefixed with ?, which allows the optimizer change it or elide it if needed. Opcodes without that prefix will be always compiled as written.

The '!' prefix marks the statement as volatile, which means it will be a subject to certain, but not all optimizations, in order to preserve its semantics.

You can insert macros into assembly, by prefixing them with + and using the same syntax as in Millfork:

macro void run(byte x) {
    output = x
}

byte output @$c000

void main () {
    byte a
    a = 7
    asm {
        + run(a)
    }
}

You can insert raw bytes into your assembly using the array syntax:

[ $00, $00 ]
"this is a string to print" bbc
["this is a string to print but this time it's zero-terminated so it will actually work" bbc, 0]
[for x,0,until,8 [x]]

Assembly functions

Assembly functions can be declared as macro or not.

A macro assembly function is inserted into the calling function like an inline assembly block, and therefore usually it shouldn't end with RET, RETI or RETN.

A non-macro assembly function should end with RET, JP, RETI or RETN (Zilog) / RET or JMP (Intel) as appropriate, or it should be an external function.

For both macro and non-macro assembly functions, the return type can be any valid return type, like for Millfork functions.
If the size of the return type is one byte, then the result is passed via the A register.
If the size of the return type is two bytes, then the result is passed via the HL register pair.

Assembly function parameters

An assembly function can have parameters. They differ from what is used by Millfork functions.

Macro assembly functions can have the following parameter types:

For example, if you have:

// Zilog syntax
macro asm void increase(byte ref v, byte const inc) {
    LD A,(v)
    ADD A,inc
    LDA (v),A
}

// Intel syntax
macro asm void increase(byte ref v, byte const inc) {
    LDA v
    ADD inc
    STA v
}

and call increase(score, 10), the entire call will compile into:

// Zilog syntax
LD A,(score)
ADD A,10
LD (score),A

// Intel syntax
LDA score
ADD 10
STA score

Non-macro functions can only have their parameters passed via registers:

Work in progress: Currently, only few parameter signatures are supported for non-macro assembly functions:

More parameters or parameters passed via other registers do not work yet.

Macro assembly functions cannot have any parameter passed via registers.

Safe assembly

Since assembly gives the programmer unlimited access to all machine features, certain assumptions about the code may be broken. In order to make assembly cooperate with the rest of the Millfork code, it should abide to the following rules:

The above list is not exhaustive.