3/10/2017 3:14 PM | |
Posts: 47 Rating: (1) |
Hello I think i may of ask before im not sure, but im confused to what the value represents 16#0 - does this mean 16 bit, word number 0? |
3/10/2017 3:25 PM | |
Joined: 5/12/2006 Last visit: 5/14/2024 Posts: 22251 Rating: (2985)
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it means 16bit Value 0. Also 0000! Regards Christoph |
3/10/2017 3:38 PM | |
Posts: 47 Rating: (1) |
thanks Chris, can i ask why it will allow you to run at 8 bit (8#0) also when a word is 16bit? |
3/10/2017 3:38 PM | |
Posts: 5225 Rating: (1187)
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ouch! [LINK] Maybe..... [LINK 2] 2#xxx [LINK] It is a number notation.. it does not indicate how many bits used. DWORD#16#0..... notation for DWORD sized in HEX number notation. AttachmentNotations.zip (334 Downloads) |
Last edited by: William_B at: 3/10/2017 3:39:13 PMLast edited by: William_B at: 3/10/2017 3:41:37 PMLast edited by: William_B at: 3/10/2017 3:43:06 PMLast edited by: William_B at: 3/10/2017 3:44:05 PMsorry for many changes |
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3/10/2017 4:10 PM | |
Posts: 47 Rating: (1) |
perfect, just what i was wanting, thanks fella So end of todays briefing, 2# is a binary value stored 16# is a hex value stored The actual bit allocation is allocated by the data type area "word, Dword" etc. all makes sense now. |
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