[Coco] Convert floating point formats
Walter Zambotti
zambotti at iinet.net.au
Wed Aug 14 00:12:00 EDT 2019
Here is the PC side code that I ended up making to convert CoCo OS9 C PDP1 floating point numbers to modern PC IEEE754 floating point and visa versa.
union _Data
{
unsigned long long llval;
double dval;
unsigned int lval;
unsigned char bytes[8];
unsigned short words[4];
unsigned int dwords[2];
};
typedef union _Data PDP1data;
typedef union _Data IEEE754data;
double ConvertDBLPDP1toIEEE754(PDP1data PDP1data)
{
IEEE754data iee754;
unsigned long long signbit, exp, mantissa;
if (PDP1data.llval == 0)
{
return 0.0;
}
signbit = PDP1data.llval & 0x8000000000000000;
exp = (PDP1data.llval & 0x00000000000000ff) + 0x37e;
mantissa = PDP1data.llval & 0x7fffffffffffff00;
iee754.llval = signbit | (exp<<52) | (mantissa>>11);
return iee754.dval;
}
PDP1data ConvertDblIEEE754toPDP1(double dvalue)
{
PDP1data PDP1data;
IEEE754data IEEE754data;
unsigned long long signbit, exp, mantissa;
IEEE754data.dval = dvalue;
// IEEE floats can have a negative zero that PDP1 floats cannot have
// if the value is zero then we make it a good zero
if (IEEE754data.dval == 0.0)
{
IEEE754data.llval = 0;
return IEEE754data;
}
signbit = IEEE754data.llval & 0x8000000000000000;
exp = ((IEEE754data.llval & 0x7ff0000000000000)>>52) - 0x37e;
mantissa = IEEE754data.llval & 0x000fffffffffffff;
PDP1data.llval = signbit | (exp) | (mantissa<<11);
return PDP1data;
}
-----Original Message-----
From: Coco [mailto:coco-bounces at maltedmedia.com] On Behalf Of James Jones
Sent: Thursday, 4 July 2019 7:38 PM
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts <coco at maltedmedia.com>
Subject: Re: [Coco] Convert floating point formats
On Fri, May 24, 2019 at 9:30 AM Alex Evans <varmfskii at gmail.com> wrote:
> I don't have a line to a particular solution (though they should be
> easy to implement), but do you mean IEEE double precision as is used
> on current x86 CPUs, or are you saying that there was some other
> floating point format used by x86 FPUs such as the 8087 sometime in
> the past that you are interested in converting to/from. I also was
> under the impression that the Microware C Compiler used IEEE floating
> point in which case no conversion needs to be made, it is already in
> the right format.
>
The switch to IEEE 754 floating point came with OS-9/68000.
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