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Do you assign a program a range of RAM addresses to use before you run it?
Does pushing a hex value onto an address position overwrite that address
OR
do you have to clear/refresh/reset it first?
I always worried about fucking up Windows by clashing with addresses used for OS processes.
The only thing I ever used hex values for was toggling values on emulators to activate "cheat" settings
or turn off background layers/audio track layers.
It could be like checking for unused channel bandwidth on the RF allocation chart.
I had the callsign KN1HON for ten years 2010–2019,
which I never did anything with because radio equipment costs thousands and I had no job.
Most lessons on the subject aren't very descriptive about the process itself
like they want you to dig in first and find out for yourself
when I don't take such foolish risks with pricey hardware.
I could fuck up OS settings and boot up to nothing but a cursor that won't let me log in or do anything.
I hate when risk takers learn things way earlier just because they didn't worry about digging in.
Do you have to clear/reset values before you pop them or does doing so do both?!
Or is popping just pulling a value from that register address?!
They use SUCH unprofessional terms like "pop" and "push".
If they'd use such teenage sounding zit popping terms then these IT punks do deserve to be shat upon.