116 Section 10: The Index Register and Loop ControlIand e

For the purpose of loop control, the integer portion (the counter value) of the stored control number can be up to five digits long (nnnnn.xxxyy). The counter value (nnnnn) is zero if not specified otherwise.

xxx, in the decimal portion of the control number, must be specified as a three-digit number. (For example, ―5‖ must be ―005‖.) xxx is zero if not specified otherwise. Whenever I or e is encountered, nnnnn is compared internally to xxx, which represents the end level for incrementing or decrementing.

yymust be specified as a two-digit number. yy cannot be zero, so if left (or specified) as 00, the value for yy defaults to 1. The value nnnnn is altered by the amount of yy each time the loop runs through I or e. Both yy and xxx are reference values, which do not change with loop execution.

Indirect Display Control

While you can use the Index register to format the display manually (that is, from the keyboard), this function is most commonly used in programming. This capability is especially valuable for the f function, for which accuracy can be stipulated by specifying the number of digits to be displayed (as described in section 14).

There are, as usual, certain display limitations to keep in mind. Recall that any display format function merely alters the number of decimal places to which the display is rounded. In its memory, the calculator always retains a number in scientific notation as a 10-digit mantissa with a two-digit exponent.

The integer portion of the number in the Index register specifies the number of decimal places to which the display is rounded. A number less than zero defaults to zero (zero decimal places displayed in format), while a number greater than 9 defaults to 9 (9 decimal places displayed in ).*

*Note that in i and ^ format modes, the maximum display is a seven-digit mantissa with a two-digit exponent. However, a format number greater than six (and less than or equal to nine) will alter the decimal place at which rounding occurs. (Refer to page 58-59.)