In Computer Science when do you learn the fundamentals of high level languages and the methodologies a compiler uses to create assembly instructions? What is the primary book used for this course? Like, if you’re using Ada or Ghidra and trying to piece together what is happening in binary execution, I want to know structures to look for on this basic level.
I’m asking about the simple stuff like what you find in Arduino sketches with variables, type declarations, branching, looping, booleans, flags, interrupts etc. Also how these might differ across architectures like CISC/RISC, Harvard/von Neumann, and various platform specifics like unique instruction set architecture implementations.
I have several microcontrollers with Flash Forth running the threaded interpreter. I never learned to branch and loop in FF like I can in Bash, Arduino, or Python. I hope exploring the post topic will help me fill in the gap in my understanding using the good ol’ hacker’s chainsaw. If any of you can read between the lines of this inquiry and make inference that might be helpful please show me the shortcuts. I am a deeply intuitive learner that needs to build from a foundation of application above memorization or theory. TIA
I learned through three things:
The first two things helped me understand how common code constructs are translated to assembly, so I can do a rough projection in my head when skimming a C function. Nowadays you can get quite far just by playing around on godbolt.
The third thing helps surface the less visible aspects of CPUs. After learning how a few low-level optimisations work, all the principles and explanations start to repeat, and 90% of them apply to every modern architecture. You can set out with specific high-level questions, like:
Very quickly you’ll find lots of insightful articles and comments explaining things like CPU caching, prefetching, branch prediction, pipelining, etc.
I have no book recommendations for you. I’ve found all the best information is freely online in blogs and comment sections, and that the best way to direct my learning is to have a project (or get employed to do low-level stuff). Might be different for you though!