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How do I put the value of 0x04 in register 4 if the instruction was 1rxy? 1RXY-Load register R with the value at memory address XY

#include <stdio.h>

unsigned char r0,r1,r2,r3,r4,r5,r6,r7,r8,r9,ra,rb,rc,rd,re,rf;

void reg_check(unsigned char reg);
void rxy1(unsigned char reg, unsigned char val);

int main(){
    unsigned char memloc1=0x14;
    unisgned char memloc2=0x04;

    unsigned char temp,reg,val_add;
    temp=(x && 0xFF00) >> 8;

    if (temp = 0xB){
    	reg=(memloc1 &0x0F);
    	val_add=memloc2;
    	rxy1(reg,val_add);
    }

    return 0;
}
void reg_check(unsigned char reg){

}
void rxy1(unsigned char reg, unsigned char val){

The actual instruction is 0x1404, this split into two bytes, memloc1 and memloc2. According to the format of 1rxy, which means to put value "at" memory location xy in register r.

so here register 4 or unsigned char r4 would have to hold the value at memory location 0x04 which would hold some other number.

My question is how do I test for the register variable by determining the "r" or 1"r"xy in 1"4"04 and placing the value held at the location xy into the unsigned char variable r4

for example if memory location 0x04 held 0xFB.

I hope this makes sense.

[edit] Example

#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
    unsigned char r0,r2,r3,r4;
    unsigned char mem1=0x14;  //at lmemory address 00
    unsigned char mem2=0x04;  //at lmemory address 01



    unsigned char reg_val_store=mem1 & 0x0F;


    if( ((mem1= & 0xF0) >> 4) == 0x1){
    	if (reg_val_store == 0x4){
    		//then put value store at memory address "04" into register 4.
    		//and just say for example "0xFD" was at memory location "04"
    		//since register value is 4 from the instruction read in 0x1"4"04

    		//i want to put 0xFD in the r4 unsigned char variable, how do i do this?
    		r4=0xFD; // this is of course correct but the instruction read in changes and 
    	        // so does the register variable. how do i modify my code for this change?
    	}
    }

    return 0;
}
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great! glad it worked. – Aviator Sep 13 at 6:16
1  
sil3nt, perhaps you should ask several separate questions, instead of a single big post that you keep updating with new questions? It is hard to answer as it is now, since we have to read through lots of questions that have already been handled, before we get to the current question. – Thomas Padron-McCarthy Sep 13 at 19:13
sorry Thomas, Hopefully I corrected my self accordingly – sil3nt Sep 14 at 1:54

1 Answer

vote up 1 vote down

If i understand correctly, you want to put B4 in memory[0] and 04 in memory[1]. Am i right?

This will do that.

memory[0] = ((x & 0xFF00) >> 8 ); //Will put B4 in memory[0]
memory[1] = (x & 0xFF); //Will put 04 in memory[1]

I think, next you want to check B and 4 seperately on memory[0] and then proceed to your next step. Right?

(memory[0] & 0xF0) >> 4 // will give you 0xB
(memory[0] & 0x0F) //will give you 0x4

Is this what you are looking for?

Update: For your reading problem, you should be using this .

while (!feof(f))
{
    fscanf(f,"%X",&inst[i]);
    i++;
}

This reads till EOF and you could use i value after this loop to know how many instructions are read and put it in a variable say n_instr. And then for looping thro' instructions you could use this

while(loop<n_instr) //instead of just loop<80
{
        memory[j] = ((inst[loop] & 0xFF00) >> 8 );
        j=j+2;
        memory[k] = (inst[loop] & 0x00FF);
        k=k+2;

        loop++;
}
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:) yes, Its because my instructions are to first read into an unsigned int then extract a byte into an unsigned char then follow on from there. I don't quite understand how to assign the last byte into the unsigned char and read values separately to determine what action/instruction to take. – sil3nt Sep 12 at 7:54
edited my answer.. hope it helps – Aviator Sep 12 at 8:06
It works. Thank you – sil3nt Sep 13 at 5:00
Edited my answer again for your new reading problem – Aviator Sep 13 at 5:06
Ahk, when reading till EOF, why does while (i<80 && (fscanf(f,"%X",&inst)) != EOF) incorrect? – sil3nt Sep 13 at 5:13
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