Machine Code Monitor

A machine code monitor (aka machine language monitor) is software built-into or separately available for various computers, allowing the user to enter commands to view and change memory locations on the machine, with options to load and save memory contents from/to secondary storage. Machine code monitors became something of a mass software product in the home computer era of the late 1970s and into the 1980s. Some full-featured machine code monitors provided detailed control of the execution of machine language programs (much like a debugger), and included absolute-address assembler and disassembler capability. It was not unheard of to do all of one's programming with a monitor (indeed, in the first years of home computing, many people made do with entering (in BASIC: "POKE'ing") hand-assembled opcodes and operands into program memory).

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
almaden
self deception
blue devils
national gallery of art
list of people who have disappeared
list of mayors of los angeles, california
john forrest, 1st baron forrest of bunbury
lucasarts adventure games
old kent road
grove street cemetery
automated analyser
dora the explorer
maryland transit administration
venial sin
timothy dwight
kanichi asakawa
damien marchessault
jehudi ashmun
charles montague bakewell
audit bureau of circulations
roger sherman baldwin
broad peak
simeon baldwin
sam and max: freelance police (computer game)
john andr
simeon eben baldwin
lyman beecher
hiram bingham
samuel william yorty
william whiting boardman
buonamico buffalmacco
kingman brewster, jr.
lake mead
hermann buhl
famous people players
antonio rossellino
lake powell
william bristol
bernardo rossellino
jedediah chapman
andrea sansovino
david daggett
mortal sin
henry waggaman edwards