Reputation: 1233
I am very new to Microcontroller programming particularly PIC18F87J11, and I am using MPLAB C18 compiler. I was reading the datasheet for various topics such as saving to memory or working with timers. I noticed the examples are written in assembly language, but I have minimum experience with it. Is there a way to use the power of Assembly and C together in my project?
I do not understand assembly that good or else I would try to convert the code to C, in this case, I rather just use the assembly code with few changes.
Now can someone show me an example of how you would use an assembly function in a C program with MPLAB C18 compiler?
The assembly function can be as simple as hello world. I just need to understand the process of combing and using two different languages on MPLAB. I tried to create a quick function for testing, but I did not know where to put the assembly code. Do assembly codes need their own files included in the project?
I hope someone can enlighten me with a full simple example just to be able to see the big picture. I appropriate the help in advance, thanks!
Upvotes: 2
Views: 5613
Reputation: 4411
There's a way to use asm in C language, depending on the compiler you use (the capacity to use asm in C is not part of the standard). Each compiler doesn't use the same syntax. With MPLAB C18 it's something like this:
void main()
{
_asm
movlw 0x57
movwf PORTB
_endasm
}
The example above is from this link, which will explain you how to use asm in C with MPLAB C18.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 5812
Without access to the compiler I can't test this, but the MPLAB C18 C Compiler User's Guide and Release Notes which I found here states:
2.8.2 Inline Assembly
MPLAB C18 provides an internal assembler using a syntax similar to the MPASM assembler. The block of assembly code must begin with
_asm
and end with_endasm
. The syntax within the block is:
[label:] [<instruction> [arg1[, arg2[, arg3]]]]
...
So, it would seem to me that one solution might be to embed something like this in your .C file
void myAsmFunction()
{
_asm
// The asm code you've been looking at
_endasm
}
Then call myAsmFunction from wherever appropriate. If you're wanting to include parameters and return values then it gets a little trickier.
Upvotes: 2