In my program, a hex number is divided by ten and the remainder is checked.
First division is performed well; however, after the second division, the program goes wrong. I am new to assembly, and I couldn't find where the problem is...
Here is the code segment:
ORG 1000
    MOV AX, 0x04B4 (1204 decimal value )
    MOV BX, 0x000A ( 10 decimal value )
    MOV CX, 0x0000
    DIV BX ( After this part, AX is 120 decimal and DX 4 decimal )
    CMP DX, 0x0000
    JE eq1
    ADD CX, 0x0002
    JMP con1
    eq1:    ADD CX, 0x0001  
    con1:
    DIV BX ( But, after this division AX becomes 6677 ( 26231 decimal and DX remains 4 decimal )
    CMP DX, 0x0000
Thanks for help!
The DIV BX instruction divides the 32-bit value in DX:AX by BX. Since you're not initializing DX, the upper word of the dividend is whatever garbage was left in the DX register from the previous computation, so you're really dividing 0x00040078=262314 by 10. The result is correct: a quotient of 26231 with a remainder of 4.
In the first division is must have been pure luck that DX happened to be 0 initially.
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