doc: incbin: no need to mention an ancient Amiga assembler

There is no reason to mention an ancient Amiga assembler as the source
for INCBIN, especially since it is supported by quite a few other
assemblers.

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin (Intel) <hpa@zytor.com>
This commit is contained in:
H. Peter Anvin (Intel) 2020-06-30 10:46:43 -07:00
parent f397a3433d
commit f6a5c1ce20

View File

@ -1355,11 +1355,10 @@ the above example could also be written:
\S{incbin} \i\c{INCBIN}: Including External \i{Binary Files}
\c{INCBIN} is borrowed from the old Amiga assembler \i{DevPac}: it
includes a binary file verbatim into the output file. This can be
handy for (for example) including \i{graphics} and \i{sound} data
directly into a game executable file. It can be called in one of
these three ways:
\c{INCBIN} includes binary file data verbatim into the output
file. This can be handy for (for example) including \i{graphics} and
\i{sound} data directly into a game executable file. It can be called
in one of these three ways:
\c incbin "file.dat" ; include the whole file
\c incbin "file.dat",1024 ; skip the first 1024 bytes