Text Editors for Assembly
contributed by Dylan Brotherston
Atom
Install atom:language-mips, by going to Edit ▷ Preferences ▷ Install, and searching for the package. Like Sublime Text's and VSCode's support, this is based on the TextMate syntax bundle.
To set your tab-width to 8, go to Edit ▷ Preferences ▷ Editor, and set Tab Length to 8.
contributed by Jashank Jeremy
Emacs
GNU Emacs' asm-mode
works great for writing assembly.
It will automatically ensure
your operands, comments, and labels
are correctly aligned —
but beware, it assumes that
;
, //
, or /*
...*/
indicate comments,
which is not the case for SPIM.
On CSE, files with a .s
extension
are assumed to be for a statistics language
in the S family (e.g., R),
and will start in ESS mode.
You'll need to explicitly flip into asm-mode,
by running M-x asm-mode,
or change your auto-mode-alist.
contributed by Jashank Jeremy and Dylan Brotherston
gedit
gedit is really a thin wrapper around GtkSourceView, a general-purpose text editing widget, which supports configurable syntax highlighting. However, it doesn't support MIPS assembly out-of-the-box — you need to help it along a bit.
On CSE, just run
1092 gedit-mips-styles
Elsewhere, you'll need to install the language files yourself. Here's asm-mips.lang;
To set your tab-width to 8 in gedit, under Edit ▷ Preferences, choose the Editor tab, and set Tab width to 8.
contributed by Callum Avery
nano
github:scopatz/nanorc:asm.nanorc
is a working syntax definition
for most assembly languages;
add its contents to your nanorc
.
Beware: it assumes that
//
, or /*
...*/
indicate comments,
which is not the case for SPIM.
You may need to modify the syntax file
before adding it to your nanorc.
To set your tab-width to 8, do:
echo 'set tabsize 8' >> ~/.nanorc
contributed by Callum Avery
Sublime Text
In PackageControl, install MIPS Syntax
,
which corresponds to github:contradictioned/mips-syntax.
Like Atom's and VSCode's support,
this is based on the TextMate syntax bundle.
To set your tab-width to 8,
choose Preferences ▷ Settings,
and, in the right-hand-side editor,
between the braces add: "tab_size": 8
contributed by Dylan Brotherston, Callum Avery
Vim
A few good options exist for Vim syntax files.
We suggest github:harenome/vim-mipssyntax.
Add the mips.vim
language file
from that repository
to your ~/.vim/syntax
,
or if you use Pathogen,
add the repository to your set of bundles.
To set your tab-width to 8:
echo 'set shiftwidth=8 | set softtabstop=8 | set tabstop=8' >> ~/.vimrc
contributed by Callum Avery
Visual Studio Code
In Visual Studio Code, open the quick-open (Ctrl+P)
and type ext install kdarkhan.mips
.
Like Atom's and Sublime Text's support,
this is based on the TextMate syntax bundle.
To set your tab-width to 8, under File ▷ Preferences ▷ Settings, set Editor: Tab Size to 8.