macro-assembler - meaning and definition. What is macro-assembler
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What (who) is macro-assembler - definition

SOFTWARE
Atari Macro Assembler

Macro-Jê languages         
LANGUAGE FAMILY IN BRAZIL
Macro-Ge Languages; Macro-Ge; Macro Ge; Macro-Ge languages; Macro-Ge language; Macro-Gê; Macro-Gê language; Macro-Jê language; Macro-Jê; Macro-Je languages; Macro-Je language; Macro-Je; Macro-Gê languages; Nuclear Macro-Je languages; Nuclear-Macro-Je languages; Macro Gê; Macro Jê; Macro Je; Proto-Macro-Jê
Macro-Jê (also spelled Macro-Gê) is a medium-sized language stock in South America, mostly in Brazil but also in the Chiquitanía region in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, as well as (formerly) in small parts of Argentina and Paraguay. It is centered on the Jê language family, with most other branches currently being single languages due to recent extinctions.
Macro-Otomákoan languages         
Macro-Otomákoan; Macro-Otomakoan languages
Macro-Otomákoan is a proposal linking three small language families of the Amazon: The Harákmbut (Tuyoneri) family, the extinct Otomakoan languages, and the Trumai language isolate. It was proposed by Kaufman (1990)Kaufman, Terrence.
Macro-Panoan languages         
HYPOTHETICAL PROPOSAL LINKING FOUR LANGUAGE FAMILIES OF PERU, BRAZIL, BOLIVIA, PARAGUAY, AND ARGENTINA
Macro-Panoan
Macro-Panoan is a hypothetical proposal linking four language families of Peru, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Argentina that Kaufman (1994) says "seems promising".Kaufman, Terrence.

Wikipedia

Atari Assembler Editor

Atari Assembler Editor (sometimes written as Atari Assembler/Editor) is a ROM cartridge-based development system released by Atari, Inc. in 1981. It is used to edit, assemble, and debug 6502 programs for the Atari 8-bit family of home computers without the need for additional tools. It was programmed by Kathleen O'Brien of Shepardson Microsystems, the company which wrote Atari BASIC, and Assembler Editor shares many design concepts with that language.

Assembly times are slow, making the cartridge challenging to use for larger programs. In the manual, Atari recommended the Assembler Editor as a tool for writing subroutines to speed up Atari BASIC, which would be much smaller than full applications. The Atari Macro Assembler was offered as an alternative with better performance and more features, such as macros, but it was disk-based, copy-protected, and did not include an editor or debugger. Despite the recommendation, commercial software was written using the Assembler Editor, such as the games Eastern Front (1941), Caverns of Mars, Galahad and the Holy Grail, and Kid Grid.

The source code to the original Assembler Editor was licensed to Optimized Systems Software who shipped EASMD based on it.