Gamepad code
For ca65
I am a big fan of structured code, so this coding style will be a bit different from the nesasm version above. This describes the nameless loops used in the code you see below.
Reading pressed buttons
The result byte buttons should be placed in zero page to save a cycle each time through the loop.
; we reserve one byte for storing the data that is read from controller .zeropage buttons .res 1
When reading from JOYPAD* what is read might be different from $01/$00 for various reasons. (See Controller port registers.) In this code the only concern is bit 0 read from JOYPAD*..
JOYPAD1 = $4016 JOYPAD2 = $4017
This is the end result that will be stored in buttons. 1 if the button was pressed, 0 otherwise.
bit: 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 button: A B Select Start Up Down Left Right
This subroutine takes 132 cycles to execute but ignores the Famicom expansion controller. It uses a ring counter technique: $01 is loaded into the result first, and once eight bits are shifted in, the 1 bit will be shifted out, terminating the loop.
; At the same time that we strobe bit 0, we initialize the ring counter ; so we're hitting two birds with one stone here readjoy: lda #$01 sta JOYPAD1 sta buttons lsr a ; now A is 0 sta JOYPAD1 : lda JOYPAD1 lsr a ; bit0 -> Carry rol buttons ; Carry -> bit0; bit 7 -> Carry bcc :- rts
Adding support for controllers on the Famicom's DA15 expansion port and for player 2's controller is straightforward.
.zeropage buttons1: .res 1 buttons2: .res 1 .code readjoy: lda #$01 sta JOYPAD1 sta buttons2 ; player 2's buttons double as a ring counter lsr a ; now A is 0 sta JOYPAD1 : lda JOYPAD1 and #$03 ; ignore bits other than controller cmp #$01 ; Set carry if and only if nonzero rol buttons1 ; Carry -> bit0; bit 7 -> Carry lda JOYPAD2 ; Repeat and #$03 cmp #$01 rol buttons2 ; Carry -> bit0; bit 7 -> Carry bcc :- rts
If your code is intended to be used with APU DMC playback this code will need to be altered. The NES occasionally glitches the controller port twice in a row if sample playback is enabled, and games using samples need to work around this. For example, Super Mario Bros. 3 reads each controller's data at least two times each frame. First it reads it as normal, then it reads it again. If the two results differ, it does the procedure all over.