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Home/ Questions/Q 837387
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T05:08:03+00:00 2026-05-15T05:08:03+00:00

is it possible to write a single character using a syscall from within an

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is it possible to write a single character using a syscall from within an inline assembly block? if so, how? it should look “something” like this:

__asm__ __volatile__
                    (
                     " movl $1,  %%edx \n\t"
                     " movl $80, %%ecx \n\t"
                     " movl $0,  %%ebx \n\t"
                     " movl $4,  %%eax \n\t"
                     " int $0x80       \n\t"
                     ::: "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx"
                    );

$80 is ‘P’ in ascii, but that returns nothing.

any suggestions much appreciated!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T05:08:04+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 5:08 am

    Something like

    
    char p = 'P';
    
    int main()
    {
    __asm__ __volatile__
                        (
                         " movl $1,  %%edx \n\t"
                         " leal p , %%ecx \n\t"
                         " movl $0,  %%ebx \n\t"
                         " movl $4,  %%eax \n\t"
                         " int $0x80       \n\t"
                         ::: "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx"
                        );
    }
    

    Add: note that I’ve used lea to Load the Effective Address of the char into ecx register; for the value of ebx I tried $0 and $1 and it seems to work anyway …

    Avoid the use of external char

    int main()
    {
    __asm__ __volatile__
                        (
                         " movl $1,  %%edx \n\t"
                         " subl $4, %%esp \n\t"
                         " movl $80, (%%esp)\n\t"
                         " movl %%esp, %%ecx \n\t"
                         " movl $1,  %%ebx \n\t"
                         " movl $4,  %%eax \n\t"
                         " int $0x80       \n\t"
                         " addl $4, %%esp\n\t"
                         ::: "%eax", "%ebx", "%ecx", "%edx"
                        );
    }

    N.B.: it works because of the endianness of intel processors! 😀

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