Suppose I have the following declared:
section .bss
buffer    resb     1
And these instructions follow in section .text:
mov    al, 5                    ; mov-immediate
mov    [buffer], al             ; store
mov    bl, [buffer]             ; load
mov    cl, buffer               ; mov-immediate?
Am I correct in understanding that bl will contain the value 5, and cl will contain the memory address of the variable buffer?
I am confused about the differences between
- moving an immediate into a register,
- moving a register into an immediate (what goes in, the data or the address?) and
- moving an immediate into a register without the brackets 
- For example, mov cl, buffervsmov cl, [buffer]
 
- For example, 
UPDATE: After reading the responses, I suppose the following summary is accurate:
- mov edi, arrayputs the memory address of the zeroth array index in- edi. i.e. the label address.
- mov byte [edi], 3puts the VALUE 3 into the zeroth index of the array
- after add edi, 3,edinow contains the memory address of the 3rd index of the array
- mov al, [array]loads the DATA at the zeroth index into- al.
- mov al, [array+3]loads the DATA at the third index into- al.
- mov [al], [array]is invalid because x86 can't encode 2 explicit memory operands, and because- alis only 8 bits and can't be used even in a 16-bit addressing mode. Referencing the contents of a memory location. (x86 addressing modes)
- mov array, 3is invalid, because you can't say "Hey, I don't like the offset at which- arrayis stored, so I'll call it 3". An immediate can only be a source operand.
- mov byte [array], 3puts the value 3 into the zeroth index (first byte) of the array. The- bytespecifier is needed to avoid ambiguity between byte/word/dword for instructions with memory, immediate operands. That would be an assemble-time error (ambiguous operand size) otherwise.
Please mention if any of these is false. (editor's note: I fixed syntax errors / ambiguities so the valid ones actually are valid NASM syntax. And linked other Q&As for details)
 
     
     
     
     
     
    