1

I am having trouble converting this java code...the code originally converts 32bit fpn to decimal. I am trying to make it covert 64bit fpn to decimal. Please help

original code that converts 32bit FPN to decimal


private void ConvertToDecimal(){
    int pos = 1;
    double doubleBin [] = new double [FPNRep.length()];
    boolean bNegative = false;
    double exp = 0.0;
    double sig = 0.0;

    for(int i = 0; i<=FPNRep.length() - 1; i++){
        if (FPNRep.charAt(i) == '0'){
            doubleBin[i] = 0;}
        else{
            doubleBin[i] = 1;}}

    if (doubleBin[0] == 1){
        bNegative = true;}
    else{
        bNegative = false;}
    for (int i = 1; i <= 8; i++){
        exp += (doubleBin[i] * Math.pow(2, 8 - i));}
    exp = exp - 127;
    for (int i = 9; i <= 31; i++){
        if (doubleBin[i] == 1){
            sig  += (1 / Math.pow(2, pos));}
        pos++;}
    //Add the hidden bit.
    sig = sig + 1;
    if (bNegative == true){
        number = -1 * sig  * Math.pow(2, exp);}
    else{
        number = 1 * sig * Math.pow(2, exp);}
    return;
}

my attempt to change the code to 64-bit FPN to decimal and my results


private void ConvertToDecimal(){
    int pos = 1;
    double doubleBin [] = new double [FPNRep.length()];
    boolean bNegative = false;
    double exp = 0.0;
    double sig = 0.0;

    for(int i = 0; i<=FPNRep.length() - 1; i++){
        if (FPNRep.charAt(i) == '0'){
            doubleBin[i] = 0;}
        else{
            doubleBin[i] = 1;}}

    if (doubleBin[0] == 1){
            bNegative = true;}
    else{
            bNegative = false;}
    for (int i = 1; i <= 11; i++){
        exp += (doubleBin[i] * Math.pow(2, 11 - i));}
        exp = exp - 127;
    for (int i = 12; i <= 63; i++){
        if (doubleBin[i] == 1){
            sig  += (1 / Math.pow(2, pos));}
        pos++;}
        //Add the hidden bit.
        sig = sig + 1;
        if (bNegative == true){
            number = -1 * sig  * Math.pow(2, exp);}
        else{
            number = 1 * sig * Math.pow(2, exp);}
        return;
}

I used the 64-bit representation of 12 and these were my results after running my attempted 64-bit to decimal code:

result should = 12

result = 6.339534373627983E270

If you are unsure of what I am trying to do refer to this website

0

1 Answer 1

0

Not sure why you go to the trouble of doing this all by hand where Java already has all the methods you want.

It looks like your input is a String representing a base 2 IEEE 754 floating point number in binary, either 32bit or 64bit. Coincidentally, this is exactly what Java's float and double are, respectively. Therefore:

public float binaryStringToFloat(final String input)
{
    return Float.intBitsToFloat(Integer.parseInt(input, 2));
}

public double binaryStringToDouble(final String input)
{
    return Double.longBitsToDouble(Long.parseLong(input, 2));
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.