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Create Fixed-Point Data

This example shows the basics of how to use the fixed-point numeric object fi.

The fixed-point numeric object is called fi because J.H. Wilkinson used fi to denote fixed-point computations in his classic texts Rounding Errors in Algebraic Processes (1963), and The Algebraic Eigenvalue Problem (1965).

Setup

This example may use display settings or preferences that are different from what you are currently using. To ensure that your current display settings and preferences are not changed by running this example, the example automatically saves and restores them. The following code captures the current states for any display settings or properties that the example changes.

originalFormat = get(0,'format');
format loose
format long g

Capture the current state of and reset the fi display and logging preferences to the default values.

fiprefAtStartOfThisExample = get(fipref);
reset(fipref);

Create Fixed-Point Number with Default Properties

To assign a fixed-point data type to a number or variable with the default fixed-point properties, use the fi constructor. The resulting fixed-point value is called a fi object.

For example, create fi objects a and b. The first input to the fi constructor is the value.

a = fi(pi)
a = 
              3.1416015625

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13
b = fi(0.1)
b = 
        0.0999984741210938

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 18

The default fixed-point attributes are displayed. You can specify these attributes when you construct fi variables.

The default WordLength is 16 bits. When the FractionLength property is not specified, it is automatically set to the fraction length that gives the best precision for the given word length while avoiding an overflow, keeping the most-significant bits of the value.

Specify Signedness and Word Length Properties

The second and third inputs to the fi constructor specify signedness and the word length in bits, respectively.

Create a signed 8-bit fi object.

a = fi(pi,1,8)
a = 
                   3.15625

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 8
        FractionLength: 5

Create an unsigned 20-bit fi object.

b = fi(exp(1),0,20)
b = 
          2.71828079223633

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 20
        FractionLength: 18

Precision

The data is stored internally with as much precision as is specified. However, initializing high precision fixed-point variables with double-precision floating-point variables may not give the resolution you might expect at first glance.

For example, initialize an unsigned 100-bit fixed-point variable with a value of 0.1 and then examine its binary expansion.

a = fi(0.1,0,100)
a = 
                       0.1

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 100
        FractionLength: 103
bin(a)
ans = 
'1100110011001100110011001100110011001100110011001101000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000'

The infinite repeating binary expansion of 0.1 gets cut off at the 52nd bit. The 53rd bit is significant and it is rounded up into the 52nd bit. This is because double-precision floating-point variables (the default MATLAB® data type), are stored in 64-bit floating-point format, with 1 bit for the sign, 11 bits for the exponent, and 52 bits for the mantissa plus one hidden bit. This results in an effective 53 bits of precision. Even though double-precision floating-point has a very large range, its precision is limited to 53 bits. For more information on floating-point arithmetic, refer to Chapter 1 Numerical Computing with MATLAB, by Cleve Moler.

Because most fixed-point processors have data stored in a smaller precision, and then compute with larger precisions, you may want to create a fi object that has more precision than double-precision floating point.

For example, initialize a 40-bit unsigned fi and multiply using full-precision for products. The full-precision product of 40-bit operands is 80 bits, which is greater precision than standard double-precision floating-point.

a = fi(0.1,0,40);
bin(a)
ans = 
'1100110011001100110011001100110011001101'
b = a*a
b = 
        0.0100000000000045

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 80
        FractionLength: 86
bin(b)
ans = 
'10100011110101110000101000111101011100001111010111000010100011110101110000101001'

Access Data

The data can be accessed in a number of ways which map to built-in data types and binary strings.

For example, double(a) returns the double-precision floating-point real-world value of a, quantized to the precision of a.

a = fi(pi);
double(a)
ans = 
              3.1416015625

You can also set the real-world value in a double. For example, set the real-world value of a to e, quantized to the numeric type of a.

a.double = exp(1)
a = 
             2.71826171875

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13

Use the storedInteger function to return the stored integer in the smallest built-in integer type available, up to 64 bits.

storedInteger(a)
ans = int16
   22268

Relationship Between Stored Integer Value and Real-World Value

In binary-point scaling, the relationship between the stored integer value and the real-world value is

Real-world value=(Stored integer)2-Fraction length.

There is also slope-bias scaling, which has the relationship

Real-world value=(Stored integer)Slope+Bias

where

Slope=(Slope adjustment factor)2Fixed exponent.

and

Fixed exponent=-Fraction length.

The math operators of fi work with binary-point scaling and real-valued slope-bias scaled fi objects.

Other Data Formats

The functions bin, oct, dec, and hex return the stored integer in binary, octal, unsigned decimal, and hexadecimal strings, respectively.

bin(a)
ans = 
'0101011011111100'
oct(a)
ans = 
'053374'
dec(a)
ans = 
'22268'
hex(a)
ans = 
'56fc'

You can use dot notation to set the stored integer from binary, octal, unsigned decimal, and hexadecimal strings.

fi(π)

a.bin = '0110010010001000'
a = 
              3.1416015625

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13

fi(ϕ)

a.oct = '031707'
a = 
           1.6180419921875

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13

fi(e)

a.dec = '22268'
a = 
             2.71826171875

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13

fi(0.1)

a.hex = '0333'
a = 
           0.0999755859375

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 13

Specify Fraction Length

When the FractionLength property is not specified, it is computed to give the best precision for the magnitude of the value and given word length, while avoiding overflow. You may also specify the fraction length directly as the fourth numeric argument in the fi constructor.

Compare the fraction length of a, which was explicitly set to 0, to the fraction length of b, which was set to best precision for the magnitude of the value.

a = fi(10,1,16,0)
a = 
    10

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 0
b = fi(10,1,16)
b = 
    10

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 11

The stored integer values of a and b are different, even though their real-world values are the same. This is because the real-world value of a is the stored integer scaled by 2^0 = 1, while the real-world value of b is the stored integer scaled by 2^-11 = 0.00048828125.

storedInteger(a)
ans = int16
   10

storedInteger(b)
ans = int16
   20480

Specify Properties with Name-Value Pair Arguments

You can specify the numeric type properties by passing numeric arguments to the fi constructor, as shown above. You can also specify properties by giving the name of the property as a string followed by the value of the property.

a = fi(pi,'WordLength',20)
a = 
          3.14159393310547

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 20
        FractionLength: 17

Numeric Type Properties

Each fi object has an associated numerictype object. The numerictype object stores information about the fi object, including word length, fractionlength, and signedness.

T = numerictype
T =


          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 15

The numeric type properties can be modified either when the object is created by passing in name-value pair arguments.

T = numerictype('WordLength',40,'FractionLength',37)
T =


          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 40
        FractionLength: 37

You can also assign numeric type properties by using the dot notation.

T.Signed = false
T =


          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 40
        FractionLength: 37

All of the numeric type properties of a fi may be set at once by passing in the numerictype object. This allows you to, for example, create multiple fi objects that share the same numeric type properties.

a = fi(pi,'numerictype',T)
a = 
          3.14159265359194

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 40
        FractionLength: 37
b = fi(exp(1),'numerictype',T)
b = 
          2.71828182845638

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 40
        FractionLength: 37

You can also pass the numerictype object directly to the fi constructor.

a1 = fi(pi,T)
a1 = 
          3.14159265359194

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Unsigned
            WordLength: 40
        FractionLength: 37

Display of Real-World Values

When displaying real-world values, the closest double-precision floating-point value is shown. Double-precision floating-point may not always be able to represent the exact value of high-precision fixed-point numbers. For example, an 8-bit fractional number can be represented exactly in doubles.

a = fi(1,1,8,7)
a = 
                 0.9921875

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 8
        FractionLength: 7
bin(a)
ans = 
'01111111'

A 100-bit fractional number cannot be exactly represented.

b = fi(1,1,100,99)
b = 
     1

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 100
        FractionLength: 99

The output displays 1 when the exact value is 1 - 2^-99.

However, the full precision is preserved in the internal representation of fi.

bin(b)
ans = 
'0111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111'

Display Preferences

Use the fipref object to set the display preferences for fi. Use the savefipref function to save display preferences between MATLAB sessions.

The display of the fi object is also affected by the format function. When displaying real-world values, you can use

format long g

so that as much precision will be displayed as possible.

Cleanup

Set any display settings or preferences that the example changed back to their original states.

fipref(fiprefAtStartOfThisExample);
set(0,'format',originalFormat);
%#ok<*NOPTS,*NASGU>

See Also

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