SLAU131V October 2004 – February 2020
The assembler supports built-in functions for conversions and various math computations. Table 4-5 describes the built-in functions. The expr must be an absolute constant expression.
Function | Description |
---|---|
$acos(expr) | Returns the arccosine of expr as a floating-point value |
$asin(expr) | Returns the arcsine of expr as a floating-point value |
$atan(expr) | Returns the arctangent of expr as a floating-point value |
$atan2(expr, y) | Returns the arctangent of expr as a floating-point value in range [-π, π] |
$ceil(expr) | Returns the smallest integer not less than expr |
$cos(expr) | Returns the cosine of expr as a floating-point value |
$cosh(expr) | Returns the hyperbolic cosine of expr as a floating-point value |
$cvf(expr) | Converts expr to a floating-point value |
$cvi(expr) | converts expr to integer value |
$exp(expr) | Returns the exponential function eexpr |
$fabs(expr) | Returns the absolute value of expr as a floating-point value |
$floor(expr) | Returns the largest integer not greater than expr |
$fmod(expr, y) | Returns the remainder of expr1 ÷ expr2 |
$int(expr) | Returns 1 if expr has an integer value; else returns 0. Returns an integer. |
$ldexp(expr, expr2) | Multiplies expr by an integer power of 2. That is, expr1 × 2expr2 |
$log(expr) | Returns the natural logarithm of expr, where expr>0 |
$log10(expr) | Returns the base 10 logarithm of expr, where expr>0 |
$max(expr1, expr2) | Returns the maximum of two values |
$min(expr1, expr2) | Returns the minimum of two values |
$pow(expr1, expr2) | Returns expr1raised to the power of expr2 |
$round(expr) | Returns expr rounded to the nearest integer |
$sgn(expr) | Returns the sign of expr. |
$sin(expr) | Returns the sine of expr |
$sinh(expr) | Returns the hyperbolic sine of expr as a floating-point value |
$sqrt(expr) | Returns the square root of expr, expr≥0, as a floating-point value |
$strtod(str) | Converts a character string to a double precision floating-point value. The string contains a properly-formatted C99-style floating-point literal. |
$tan(expr) | Returns the tangent of expr as a floating-point value |
$tanh(expr) | Returns the hyperbolic tangent of expr as a floating-point value |
$trunc(expr) | Returns expr rounded toward 0 |