A label can be placed at the beginning of a statement. During assembly, the label is assigned the current value of the active location counter and serves as an instruction operand. There are two types of lables: symbolic and numeric.
A symbolic label consists of an identifier (or symbol) followed by a colon (:) (ASCII 0x3A). Symbolic labels must be defined only once. Symbolic labels have global scope and appear in the object file's symbol table.
Symbolic labels with identifiers beginning with a period (.) (ASCII 0x2E) are considered to have local scope and are not included in the object file's symbol table.
A numeric label consists of a single digit in the range zero (0) through nine (9) followed by a colon (:). Numeric labels are used only for local reference and are not included in the object file's symbol table. Numeric labels have limited scope and can be redefined repeatedly.
When a numeric label is used as a reference (as an instruction operand, for example), the suffixes b (“backward”) or f (“forward”) should be added to the numeric label. For numeric label N, the reference Nb refers to the nearest label N defined before the reference, and the reference Nf refers to the nearest label N defined after the reference. The following example illustrates the use of numeric labels:
1: / define numeric label "1" one: / define symbolic label "one" / ... assembler code ... jmp 1f / jump to first numeric label "1" defined / after this instruction / (this reference is equivalent to label "two") jmp 1b / jump to last numeric label "1" defined / before this instruction / (this reference is equivalent to label "one") 1: / redefine label "1" two: / define symbolic label "two" jmp 1b / jump to last numeric label "1" defined / before this instruction / (this reference is equivalent to label "two")