You can use the book Advanced MSDOS Programming by Ray Duncan, but this
autor use MASM and C not NASM.

El mié, 27 dic 2023 a las 20:37, marcelo.spitteler--- via Freedos-devel (<
freedos-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>) escribió:

> A86.
>
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>
> On Tue, Dec 26, 2023 at 13:49, Jim Hall via Freedos-devel
> <freedos-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> wrote:
> I actually never learned DOS assembly programming, but decided I'd
> like to start.
>
> What assembler do you recommend, and where is a good place to start
> learning about DOS assembly programming? Start with a "Hello world"
> program and eventually move up to writing an assembly version of TYPE
> and CHOICE, things like that.
>
> I was thinking about NASM, since it's open source and we include it in
> the distribution. Looking around, I found a bunch of tutorials on
> https://asmtutor.com/ that look easy enough to follow, although it's
> for Linux. Any similar tutorials to learn DOS assembly programming?
>
> Or would you recommend a different DOS assembler (and how-to guide) as
> a place to start?
>
>
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