2-7-5

Specifying a Number Base

Bitwise Operations

The logical operators listed below can be used in calculations.

Operator

Description

 

 

and

Returns the result of a bitwise product.

 

 

or

Returns the result of a bitwise sum.

 

 

xor

Returns the result of a bitwise exclusive logical sum.

 

 

not

Returns the result of a complement (bitwise inversion).

 

 

Examples 1, 2, and 3 use Bin (binary) as the number system. Example 4 uses Hex (hexadecimal).

Example 1: 10102 and 11002 = 10002

@?@?N?LBN@@??U

Example 2: 10112 or 110102 = 110112

@?@@NMPN@@?@?U

Example 3: 10102 xor 11002 = 1102

@?@?NVMPN@@??U

Example 4: not (FFFF16) = FFFF000016

LMRDDDDU

Using the baseConvert Function (Number System Transform)

The baseConvert function lets you convert a number in one base (number system) to its equivalent in another base.

Important!

The baseConvert function works for positive integers only.

The baseConvert function cannot be used in a line for which a particular number base is specified. It can be used in a normal calculation line only.

Syntax: baseConvert (Number, Current base, Expected base)

Number must be a positive integer consisting of digits 0 to 9 and/or A to F.

The current base and expected base can be any whole number from 2 to 16.

Examples:

20060301