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Home/ Questions/Q 1059831
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T18:14:00+00:00 2026-05-16T18:14:00+00:00

I’m in the process of writing an assembly program that takes two strings as

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I’m in the process of writing an assembly program that takes two strings as input and concatenates them. Here’s what I have: (using NASM syntax)

    SECTION .data
hello:  db "Hello ",0
world:  db "world!",0

    SECTION .text

; do the concatenation

Since I’ve never done any work with strings in x86 assembly before, I need to know how storing and manipulating strings work in the first place.

I’m guessing that once the length of each string is known, that concatenating would simply involve moving chunks of memory around. This part can be simplified by using libc. (I can use strlen() and strcat().)

My real problem is that I’m not familiar with the way strings are stored in x86 assembly. Do they just get added to the stack…? Do they go on a heap somewhere? Should I use malloc() (somehow)?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T18:14:01+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 6:14 pm

    The strings in your example are stored the same way a global character array would be stored by a C program. They’re just a series of bytes in the data section of your executable. If you want to concatenate them, you’re going to need some space to do it – either do it on the stack, or call malloc() to get yourself some memory. As you say, you can just use strcat() if you are willing to call out to libc. Here’s a quick example I made (AT&T syntax), using a global buffer to concatenate the strings, then print them out:

      .data
    hello:
      .asciz "Hello "
    world:
      .asciz "world!"
    buffer:
      .space 100
    
      .text
      .globl _main
      .globl _puts
      .globl _strcat
    
    _main:
      push  %rbp
      mov   %rsp, %rbp
      leaq  buffer(%rip), %rdi
      leaq  hello(%rip), %rsi
      callq _strcat
      leaq  buffer(%rip), %rdi
      leaq  world(%rip), %rsi
      callq _strcat
      leaq  buffer(%rip), %rdi
      callq _puts
      mov   $0, %rax
      pop   %rbp
      retq
    
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