Snippet:Plot

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Revision as of 12:15, 1 March 2014 by E5frog (talk | contribs) (Coordinate-Adjusted Version)
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The plot subroutine takes a coordinate and a color, and plots it on the screen. The code was originally taken from Lights Out. Plotting individual pixels is slower than blitting an image to VRAM at once, but is useful in some applications. There are two versions here: the original version, and a coordinate-adjusted version to make programming easier.

Coordinate-Adjusted Version

The following is the annotated source, with adjustments for the coordinates:


;---------------;
; Plot Function ;
;---------------;

; plot out a single point on the screen
; uses three registers as "arguments"
; r1 = color
; r2 = x (to screen) (0-101)
; r3 = y (to screen) (0-57)

plot:
	; set the color using r1
	lr	A, 1
	outs	1

	; set the column using r2
	lis	4
	as	2					; adjust the x coordinate
	com
	outs	4					; place inverted coordinate for x on port 4 (bit 7 not used)

	; set the row using r3
	lis	4
	as	3					; fix the y coordinate
	com
	outs	5					; place inverted coordinate for y on port 5

	; transfer data to the screen memory by toggling ARM
	li	$60					; %01100000, block controller input, set ARM to 1
	outs	0
	li	$50					; %01010000, block controller input, ARM = 0, bit 5 (which is N/C) is set to 1...
	outs	0

	; delay until it's fully updated
	lis	6
.plotDelay:	
	ai	$ff
	bnz	.plotDelay

	pop						; return from the subroutine

The adjustment of x and y is to allow the coordinates 0, 0 to access the upper-left pixel of the screen. VRAM in the Channel F actually expands four pixels above and to the left of that pixel. If you need a quicker plotting function, you can sacrifice this convenience and use the original version.

Original Version

;---------------;
; Plot Function ;
;---------------;

; plot out a single point on the screen
; uses three registers as "arguments"
; r1 = color
; r2 = x (to screen) (4-105)
; r3 = y (to screen) (4-61)

plot:
	; set the color using r1
	lr	A, 1
	outs	1

	; set the column using r2
	lr	A, 2
	com
	outs	4

	; set the row using r3
	lr	A, 3
	com
	outs	5

	; transfer data to the screen memory
	li	$60
	outs	0
	li	$50
	outs	0

	; delay until it's fully updated
	lis	6
.plotDelay:	
	ai	$ff
	bnz	.plotDelay

	pop							; return from the subroutine