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Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : Maths error

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BobDevries

Senior Member

Joined: 08/06/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 266
Posted: 04:58am 27 Jun 2011
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Hi gang,

Can anyone tell me the limitations of the MOD operator? I have the following lines:

90 upper = addr \ 65536
100 lower = addr MOD 65536

The value of addr is 2.68442e+09 which is within MMBasic's number range, however, I get an error: "Number too large for an integer". It would seem that the

What gives?

What I'm trying to do is manipulate numbers to allow me to PEEK and POKE to screen RAM. The PEEK and POKE commands require that the address be split into HIWORD and LOWORD 32-bit numbers.

regards,


hmmm, the manual says that the maximum integer is 16777100, which is clearly not large enough to hold the screen address. Can anyone think of a workaround?

Bob Devries
Dalby, QLD, Australia
 
Geoffg

Guru

Joined: 06/06/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 3210
Posted: 06:45am 27 Jun 2011
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Both the integer divide and the MOD operator convert both arguments to an integer first. The value held by addr is outside of the 32 bit integer range (+/- 2147483647).

This trick might help. The code for PEEK/POKE actually shifts hiword up by 16 bits then adds loword to get the address. So, to access video memory you could do:

10 FOR X = &HD250 to &H1378F
20 A=PEEK(&HA000,X)
30 NEXT X

This works (or should work because I have not tested it) because &H1378F is within the range that a float can represent without loosing accuracy (the variable X is a float).

Geoff
Geoff Graham - http://geoffg.net
 
domwild
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Joined: 16/12/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 873
Posted: 11:29pm 28 Jun 2011
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Hi,

From memory 65536 is 2**16, but in 16 bits the max. integer that can be stored is only 65535 or 2**16 - 1.

A bit like the max integer using two digits is 99 and not 100 or 10**2.

Am I right or are you wrong??

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BobDevries

Senior Member

Joined: 08/06/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 266
Posted: 12:07am 29 Jun 2011
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According to the manual, the maximum integer is 16777100 or $FFFF8C.

Regards,

Bob Devries
Dalby, QLD, Australia
 
Geoffg

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Joined: 06/06/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 3210
Posted: 08:41am 29 Jun 2011
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In the PIC32 an integer is 32 bits which is about 4 billion. The 16777100 mentioned by Bob is the maximum integer that you can store in a floating point number without loosing accuracy.

In MMBasic you do not see an integer as everything is expressed as a floating point number. As the size of a number increases floating point will start to loose track of the least significant digit, this happens at about 16777100.

Geoff
Geoff Graham - http://geoffg.net
 
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