H. Peter Anvin 2ce0274303 Use a 32-bit floating-point limb size; support 8-bit float
Use a 32-bit limb size ("like a digit, but bigger") for floating-point
conversion.  This cuts the number of multiplications per constant by a
factor of four.

This means supporting fractional-limb-sized numbers, so while we're at
it, add support for 8-bit floating point numbers (apparently used in
graphics and in audio compression applications.)
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              NASM, the Netwide Assembler.

Many many developers all over the net respect NASM for what it is
- a widespread (thus netwide), portable (thus netwide!), very
flexible and mature assembler tool with support for many output
formats (thus netwide!!).

Now we have good news for you: NASM is licensed under LGPL.
This means its development is open to even wider society of
programmers wishing to improve their lovely assembler.

The NASM project is now situated at SourceForge.net, the most
popular Open Source development site on the Internet.

Visit our website at http://nasm.sourceforge.net/ and our
SourceForge project at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nasm/

See the file CHANGES for the description of changes between revisions.

                                                   With best regards,
                                                           NASM crew.
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Readme BSD-2-Clause 10 MiB
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C 31.7%
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