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Cast fi Objects

Overwriting by Assignment

Because MATLAB® software does not have type declarations, an assignment like A = B replaces the type and content of A with the type and content of B. If A does not exist at the time of the assignment, MATLAB creates the variable A and assigns it the same type and value as B. Such assignment happens with all types in MATLAB — objects and built-in types alike — including fi, double, single, int8, uint8, int16, etc.

For example, the following code overwrites the value and int8 type of A with the value and int16 type of B:

A = int8(0);
B = int16(32767);
A = B 
A =

  int16

   32767
class(A)
ans =

    'int16'

Ways to Cast with MATLAB Software

You may find it useful to cast data into another type—for example, when you are casting data from an accumulator to memory. There are several ways to cast data in MATLAB. The following sections provide examples of four different methods:

  • Casting by Subscripted Assignment

  • Casting by Conversion Function

  • Casting with the Fixed-Point Designer™ reinterpretcast function

  • Casting with the cast Function

Casting by Subscripted Assignment

The following subscripted assignment statement retains the type of A and saturates the value of B to an int8:

A = int8(0);
B = int16(32767);
A(:) = B
A =

  int8

   127
class(A)
ans =

    'int8'

The same is true for fi objects:

fipref('NumericTypeDisplay', 'short');
A = fi(0, 1, 8, 0);
B = fi(32767, 1, 16, 0);
A(:) = B
A = 

   127
      numerictype(1,8,0)

Note

For more information on subscripted assignments, see the subsasgn function.

Casting by Conversion Function

You can convert from one data type to another by using a conversion function. In this example, A does not have to be predefined because it is overwritten.

B = int16(32767);
A = int8(B)
A =

  int8

   127
class(A)
ans =

    'int8'

The same is true for fi objects:

B = fi(32767,1,16,0)
A = fi(B,1,8,0)
B = 

       32767
      numerictype(1,16,0)

A = 

   127
      numerictype(1,8,0)

Using a numerictype Object in the fi Conversion Function

Often a specific numerictype is used in many places, and it is convenient to predefine numerictype objects for use in the conversion functions. Predefining these objects is a good practice because it also puts the data type specification in one place.

T8 = numerictype(1,8,0)
T16 = numerictype(1,16,0)
T8 =


          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 8
        FractionLength: 0

T16 =


          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 16
        FractionLength: 0
B = fi(32767,T16)
A = fi(B,T8)
B = 

       32767
      numerictype(1,16,0)

A = 

   127
      numerictype(1,8,0)

Casting with the reinterpretcast Function

You can convert fixed-point and built-in data types without changing the underlying data. The Fixed-Point Designer reinterpretcast function performs this type of conversion.

In the following example, B is an unsigned fi object with a word length of 8 bits and a fraction length of 5 bits. The reinterpretcast function converts B into a signed fi object A with a word length of 8 bits and a fraction length of 1 bit. The real-world values of A and B differ, but their binary representations are the same.

B = fi([pi/4 1 pi/2 4],0,8,5)
T = numerictype(1,8,1);
A = reinterpretcast(B,T)
B = 

    0.7813    1.0000    1.5625    4.0000

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

A = 

   12.5000   16.0000   25.0000  -64.0000

          DataTypeMode: Fixed-point: binary point scaling
            Signedness: Signed
            WordLength: 8
        FractionLength: 1

To verify that the underlying data has not changed, compare the binary representations of A and B:

binary_B = bin(B)
binary_A = bin(A)
binary_B =

    '00011001   00100000   00110010   10000000'


binary_A =

    '00011001   00100000   00110010   10000000'

Casting with the cast Function

Using the cast function, you can convert the value of a variable to the same numerictype, complexity, and fimath as another variable.

In the following example, a is cast to the data type of b. The output, c, has the same numerictype and fimath properties as b, and the value of a.

a = pi;
b = fi([],1,16,13,'RoundingMethod','Floor');
c = cast(a,'like',b)
c = 

    3.1415

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

        RoundingMethod: Floor
        OverflowAction: Saturate
           ProductMode: FullPrecision
               SumMode: FullPrecision

Using this syntax allows you to specify data types separately from your algorithmic code as described in Manual Fixed-Point Conversion Best Practices.

See Also

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