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I am stuck at a problem. I've been using gcc to compile/assemble my C code for a while and got used to using Intel assembly syntax. I used the -masm=intel flag when generating the assembly files.
Yet recently, due to company migrations, they obtained Intel's icc, claiming it is better. So now I need to use icc, but it was strange that it has the default assembly syntax as AT&T. I tried to change it but it didn't work, so I contacted Intel support and they also don't know and each person gave me a contradicting answer.
Is there a way to integrate gcc and icc so that I use icc's compiling "superiority" while at the same time compiling to intel's syntax with gcc? I am using ubuntu and got the icc version 12. X c gcc assembly syntax icc link|improve this question edited Feb 14 at 21:37Charles19k51836 asked Mar 20 '11 at 10:18Syntax_Error573111 96% accept rate.
– Paul R Mar 20 '11 at 12:07 @Paul: I don't know if you understood the question. I don't want to assemble...I just want to read assembly files, and I am not using inline assembly! I want to use the '-S' to look at assembly code – Syntax_Error Mar 20 '11 at 23:36 OK - so this is the same as your previous question on this subject?
(It looks like you deleted the original question? ). – Paul R Mar 21 '11 at 7:08.
Use_msasm Support Microsoft style assembly language insertion using MASM style syntax and, if requested, output assem- bly in MASM format amath.colorado.edu/computing/software/ma....
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