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Home/ Questions/Q 7937253
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 3, 20262026-06-03T22:28:51+00:00 2026-06-03T22:28:51+00:00

When I read some disassembly code, for I am not up on AT&T syntax,

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When I read some disassembly code, for I am not up on AT&T syntax, I do not know what some code like (%esp,1) means.

11      printf("%x", a);
0x401386        <main+182>:    movl  $0x1,0x4(%esp,1)
0x40138e        <main+190>:    movl  $0x40300d,(%esp,1)
0x401395        <main+197>:    call  0x401810 <printf>

Could someone tell what it does mean? Thank you!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-03T22:28:53+00:00Added an answer on June 3, 2026 at 10:28 pm

    This wikibook seems to have some information about the GNU assembler and its AT&T syntax:

    http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/X86_Assembly/GAS_Syntax

    I also found these two sources of documentation on Gas, but they don’t seem to be very clear or useful:

    1. http://webster.cs.ucr.edu/AsmTools/Gas/GasDoc/as_toc.html
    2. http://sourceware.org/binutils/docs-2.17/as/index.html
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