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Conditional assembly

The conditional-assembly directives allow you to include or exclude portions of an assembly depending on how a pair of expressions, or a pair of strings, compare.

The overall structure of conditionals is familiar from many other contexts. .AIF marks the start of a conditional, and precedes assembly for the case when the condition is true.

An optional .AELSE precedes assembly for the converse case, and an .AENDI marks the end of the condition.

You may nest conditionals up to a depth of 100; GASP rejects nesting beyond that, because it may indicate a bug in your macro structure.

Conditionals are primarily useful inside macro definitions, where you often need different effects depending on argument values.

See Defining your own directives for details about defining macros.

.AIF expra cmp exprb
.AIF "stra" cmp "strb"

The governing condition goes on the same line as the .AIF preprocessor command. You may compare either two strings, or two expressions.
When you compare strings, only two conditional cmp comparison operators are available: EQ (true if stra and strb are identical), and NE (the opposite).
When you compare two expressions, both expressions must be absolute (see Arithmetic expressions in GASP).
You can use the following cmp comparison operators with expressions.