On 2018-08-05, at 19:21:04, Robin Vowels wrote: > From: "Seymour J Metz" <sme...@gmu.edu> > Sent: Monday, August 06, 2018 5:52 AM > >> Technical Assembly Systemm (TASS) on the 650 had something called a program >> point. >> A program point was a one digit label, and the references to program points >> were suffixed >> with B for backwards and F for forward. It is perhaps the only thing on the >> 650 that I miss. > > You're still allowed to put 'B' or 'F' as a suffix on any label. >
Do you mean TASS (does it still exist?) or HLASM. If HLASM, do 'B' and 'F' have the same semantic as in TASS, operating on the symbol reference, not on a one-digit symbol definition? The existence of multiple disparate approaches in assemblers other than HLASM is evidence of a need. There appears to be no unique best answer, but the worst answer is "none". -- gil