From a0549b4a15a7093f990fffa4bc1d2d52ec1c16e2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Hanna Mendes Levitin Date: Wed, 1 Dec 2010 03:37:07 -0600 Subject: docs, now with style --- docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst | 127 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 127 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst (limited to 'docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst') diff --git a/docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst b/docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..91fe22e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/source/lang/cpp/arithmetic.rst @@ -0,0 +1,127 @@ +.. highlight:: cpp + +.. _lang-arithmetic: + +Arithmetic Operators (``+``, ``-``, ``*``, ``/``) +================================================= + +The operators ``+``, ``-``, ``*``, and ``/`` respectively evaluate to +the sum, difference, product, or quotient (respectively) of the two +operands. The operation is conducted using the data type of the +operands, so, for example, ``9 / 4`` gives ``2`` since 9 and 4 are +:ref:`int variables `. + +This also means that the operation can overflow if the result is +larger than that which can be stored in the data type (e.g. adding 1 +to an :ref:`lang-int` with the value 2,147,483,647 gives +-2,147,483,648). + +.. _lang-arithmetic-typeconversion: + +If the operands are of different types, the "larger" type is used for +the calculation. If one of the numbers (operands) are of the type +**float** or of type **double**, floating point math will be used for +the calculation. + +.. note:: The specifics of these rules are beyond the scope of this + documentation; for more information, see `The C++ Programming + Language `_\ , by Bjarne + Stroustroup, Appendix C, especially §§C.4-C.6, or `this WikiBooks + entry on C++ type conversion + `_. + +.. note:: For more information on how computers represent integers, + see the Wikipedia page on `two's complement + `_. + +.. contents:: Contents + :local: + +Examples +-------- + + :: + + y = y + 3; + x = x - 7; + i = j * 6; + r = r / 5; + + +Syntax +------ + + :: + + result = value1 + value2; + result = value1 - value2; + result = value1 * value2; + result = value1 / value2; + + +Parameters +---------- + +**value1**: any numeric variable or constant + +**value2**: any numeric variable or constant + +Programming Tips +---------------- + +- Know that :ref:`integer constants ` + default to :ref:`int `, so some constant calculations + may overflow (e.g., 200000 * 5000000 will yield a negative result). + +- Choose variable sizes that are large enough to hold the largest + results from your calculations. + +- Know at what point your variable will "roll over" and also what + happens in the other direction e.g. (0 - 1) for unsigned arithmetic, + or (0 - -2,147,483,648) for signed arithmetic. + +- For math that requires fractions, float variables may be used, but + be aware of their drawbacks: large size and slow computation speeds + (the STM32 has no floating point hardware, so all floating point + calculations have to be done in software). + +- Use cast operator, e.g. ``(int)myFloat`` to convert one variable type + to another on the fly. + +Arduino Compatibility +--------------------- + +Since the STM32 processor on the Maple is a 32-bit machine, the int +type overflows at a much higher value on Maple than on Arduino. In +particular, on Maple, ints do not overflow (become negative) until +they reach 2,147,483,648; on the Arduino, they overflow at 32,767. +Because of this, programs running on Maple are much less likely to run +into overflow issues. The following table summarizes the sizes and +ranges of integer datatypes on the Maple (the ranges of long long +types are approximate): + +.. _lang-arithmetic-int-sizes: + +.. csv-table:: + :header: Datatype, Unsigned range, Signed range, Size (bytes) + :widths: 8, 12, 17, 8 + + ``char``, 0 --- 255, -128 --- 127, 1 + ``short``, "0 --- 65,535", "-32,768 --- 32,767", 2 + ``int``, "0 --- 4,294,967,295", "-2,147,483,648 --- 2,147,483,647", 4 + ``long``, "0 --- 4,294,967,295", "-2,147,483,648 --- 2,147,483,647", 4 + ``long long``, "0 --- 1.8*10\ :sup:`19`\ " (approx.), "-9.2*10\ :sup:`18` --- 9.2*10\ :sup:`18` (approx.)", 8 + + +See Also +-------- + +- The individual sizes (in bits) of various available types are + defined in `libmaple_types.h + `_\ + . + +- :ref:`sizeof `\ () + + +.. include:: cc-attribution.txt -- cgit v1.2.3