4-4
Using the 162Bug Debugger
4
Numeric values may be expressed in either hexadecimal, decimal,
octal, or binary notation by immediately preceding them with the
proper base identifier.
If no base identifier is specified, then the numeric value is assumed
to be hexadecimal.
A numeric value may also be expressed as a string literal of up to
four characters. The string literal must begin and end with the
single quote mark ('). The numeric value is interpreted as the
concatenation of the ASCII values of the characters. This value is
right-justified, as any other numeric value would be.
Evaluation of an expression is always from left to right unless
parentheses are used to group part of the expression. There is no
operator precedence. Subexpressions within parentheses are
evaluated first. Nested parenthetical subexpressions are evaluated
from the inside out.
Base IdentiÞer Examples
Hexadecimal $$FFFFFFFF
Decimal &&1974, &10-&4
Octal @@456
Binary %%1000110
String
Literal
Numeric Value
(In Hexadecimal)
'A' 41
'ABC' 414243
'TEST' 54455354