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Page Title: FLOATING-POINT INTERRUPTS
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FLOATING-POINT FORMAT
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Fire Controlman Volume 03-Digital Data Systems
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Operation  Types

The  second  example  is  a  very  large  number 76655433222111118; refer to figure 5-15, frame B. After the number has been put in exponent form, it, too, will require two 32-bit words. FLOATING-POINT  PRECISION.  —Floating- point   formats   include   the   use   of   single-   and double-precision (refer to figure 5-16, frames A and B). The  names  single-  and  double-precision  imply  their usefulness:  precision. Notice  the  double-precision floating-point format, two 32-bit words where the characteristic is small compared to the mantissa in which precision accuracy is required. FLOATING-POINT  ROUND.  —Floating-point operations  also  include  rounding  instructions,  which are used for rounding the mantissa’s results; rounding up when the mantissa is equal to or greater than one-half of one and rounding down when it less than one-half of one.  Rounding  can  also  be  applied  to  double-length results of mantissas. If  the  sign  bit  is  destroyed (overflowed  into)  during  mantissa  rounding  or  division, the computer will make corrections to the mantissa or quotient. FLOATING-POINT INTERRUPTS.  —Float- ing-point interrupts can be generated when retain improper  conditions  are  detected.  The  interrupts inform the program of these conditions and permit either   notation   or   corrective   procedures.   Some conditions   include: Underflow (negative excess) or overflow (posi- tive  excess)—When  a  floating-point  char- acter exceeds an absolute value of 2N - 1 where N is the msb. Divisor —Equals  zero  in  a  divide  instruction The control section will be notified and an interrupt will be generated. Figure 5-16.—Floating-point numbers: A. Single precision; B. Double-precision. 5-22

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