4 logical expressions – Campbell Scientific CR800 and CR850 Measurement and Control Systems User Manual
Page 145
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Section 7. Installation
145
Constants Conversion
Constants are not declared with a data type, so the CR800 assigns the data type as
needed. If a constant (either entered as a number or declared with CONST) can be
expressed correctly as an integer, the compiler will use the type that is most
efficient in each expression. The integer version is used if possible, i.e., if the
expression has not yet encountered a FLOAT. CRBasic example Constants to
LONGs or FLOATs
(p. 145)
lists a programming case wherein a value normally
considered an integer (10) is assigned by the CR800 to be As FLOAT.
CRBasic Example 22. Constants to LONGs or FLOATs
Public
I
As Long
Public
A1, A2
Const
ID = 10
BeginProg
A1 = A2 + ID
I = ID * 5
EndProg
In CRBasic example Constants to LONGs or FLOATs
(p. 145),
I is an integer. A1
and A2 are FLOATS. The number 5 is loaded As FLOAT to add efficiently with
constant ID, which was compiled As FLOAT for the previous expression to avoid
an inefficient runtime conversion from LONG to FLOAT before each floating
point addition.
7.7.3.9.4 Logical Expressions
Measurements can indicate absence or presence of an event. For example, an RH
measurement of 100% indicates a condensation event such as fog, rain, or dew.
The CR800 can render the state of the event into binary form for further
processing, i.e., the event is either occurring (true), or the event has not occurred
(false).
True = -1, False = 0
In all cases, the argument 0 is translated as FALSE in logical expressions; by
extension, any non-zero number is considered "non-FALSE." However, the
argument TRUE is predefined in the CR800 operating system to only equal -1, so
only the argument -1 is always translated as TRUE. Consider the expression
If
Condition(1) = TRUE
Then
...
This condition is true only when Condition(1) = -1. If Condition(1) is any other
non-zero, the condition will not be found true because the constant TRUE is
predefined as -1 in the CR800 system memory. By entering = TRUE, a literal
comparison is done. So, to be absolutely certain a function is true, it must be set
to TRUE or -1.
Note TRUE is -1 so that every bit is set high (-1 is &B11111111 for all four
bytes). This allows the AND operation to work correctly. The AND operation
does an AND boolean function on every bit, so TRUE AND X will be non-zero if
at least one of the bits in X is non-zero, i.e., if X is not zero. When a variable of
data type BOOLEAN is assigned any non-zero number, the CR800 internally
converts it to -1.