You can do this by writing small programs, compiling them on various platforms (windows/linux), and then looking at their assembly code. This book by Dennis Yurichev follows this methodology. https://beginners.re/. Source: about 1 year ago
Regarding x86 asm, I have never done any and I doubt you are going to use it extensively. However, I'd recommend reading through the first part of Beginner Reverse Engineering so that you know how C programs are translated into x86 assembly. Once you know that pointers are essentially memory addresses with different lengths (hopefully I'm not making it up), how function calls are performed (move stack pointer,... Source: about 1 year ago
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