The option to switch assembly from Intel to AT&T syntax is present in the Output
option of each compiler. If enough space is not present, the option also presents itself as the gear symbol (âš™)
This is the symbol that looks like a bar graph (📊). If your compilations are taking long, you can use this to check the time taken by:
Though both GCC and Clang create supplementary outputs along with assembly (shown by default), and an executable (created if an executor has been added), the exact nature of the outputs and their formats differ between the compilers.
GCC allows the Tree, IPA, RTL and graph outputs, while Clang allows optimization, AST, IR and graph outputs. Some outputs (e.g. RTL or graph) also have a rich set of options in the UI to enable focussing on a particular function or compiler stage.