I've checked V 20.3 for HPUX, 20.4 and 20.5 for Linux, and 20.7 for Windows.
Their ARM as sections are lightweight, to say the least.  I'm just taking
what I can from www.linuxassembly.org and testing it on my gcc compiler as I
go.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Erik Mouw [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 10:24 AM
> To: Hendricks, Richard A
> Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
> Subject: Re: Anyone updating documentation?
> 
> 
> On Wed, Nov 29, 2000 at 02:40:07PM -0800, Hendricks, Richard A wrote:
> > Seems like the "as" documentation for arm is very light:
> > 
> > http://sources.redhat.com/binutils/docs-2.10/as_8.html#SEC163
> > 
> > Is anyone working on updating this? Is there a canonical 
> location for "as"
> > docs?
> 
> Yes, all GNU tools come with documentation in the info format. Point
> your info browser (info, emacs, tkinfo, whatever) to as.info.
>
> > What about using in-line assembly with ARM gcc?
> 
> Covered in the gcc info files.
> 
> 
> Erik
> 
> -- 
> J.A.K. (Erik) Mouw, Information and Communication Theory 
> Group, Department
> of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Information Technology 
> and Systems,
> Delft University of Technology, PO BOX 5031,  2600 GA Delft, 
> The Netherlands
> Phone: +31-15-2783635  Fax: +31-15-2781843  Email: 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> WWW: http://www-ict.its.tudelft.nl/~erik/
> 
> _______________________________________________
> http://lists.arm.linux.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm
> 


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