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millfork/docs/lang/operators.md

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Operators

Unlike in high-level languages, operators in Millfork have limited applicability. Not every well-formed expression is actually compilable. Most expressions involving single bytes compile, but for larger types usually you need to use in-place modification operators.
Further improvements to the compiler may increase the number of acceptable combinations.

Certain expressions require the commandline flag -fzp-register (.ini equivalent: zeropage_register) to be enabled. They will be marked with (zpreg) next to them. The flag is enabled by default, but you can disable it if you need to.

Work in progress: Certain expressions may not work on non-6502 targets yet. This should improve in the future.

Precedence

Millfork has different operator precedence compared to most other languages. From highest to lowest it goes:

  • *, *'

  • +, +', -, -', |, &, ^, >>, >>', <<, <<', >>>>

  • :

  • ==, !=, <, >, <=, >=

  • &&

  • ||

  • assignment and in-place modification operators

You cannot use two different operators at the same precedence levels without using parentheses to disambiguate. It is to prevent confusion about whether a + b & c << d means (a + b) & (c << d) ((a + b) & c) << d or something else.
The only exceptions are + and -, and +' and -'. They are interpreted as expected: 5 - 3 + 2 == 4 and 5 -' 3 +' 2 == 4.
Note that you cannot mix +' and -' with + and -.

Argument types

In the descriptions below, arguments to the operators are explained as follows:

  • byte means any one-byte type

  • word means any two-byte type, or a byte expanded to a word

  • long means any type longer than two bytes, or a shorter type expanded to such length to match the other argument

  • constant means a compile-time constant

  • simple means either: a constant, a non-stack variable, a pointer indexed with a constant, a pointer indexed with a non-stack variable, an array indexed with a constant, an array indexed with a non-stack variable, an array indexed with a sum of a constant and a non-stack variable, or a split-word expression made of two simple expressions. Examples: 1, a, p[2], p[i], arr[2], arr[i], arr[i+2], h:l, h[i]:l[i] Such expressions have the property that the only register they may clobber is Y.

  • mutable means an expression that can be assigned to

Split-word operator

Expressions of the shape h:l where h and l are of type byte, are considered expressions of type word.
If and only if both h and l are assignable expressions, then h:l is also an assignable expression.

Binary arithmetic operators

  • +, -:
    byte + byte
    constant word + constant word
    constant long + constant long
    constant word + byte
    word + word (zpreg)

  • *: multiplication; the size of the result is the same as the size of the arguments
    byte * constant byte
    constant byte * byte
    constant word * constant word
    constant long * constant long
    byte * byte (zpreg)

There are no division, remainder or modulo operators.

Bitwise operators

  • |, ^, &: OR, EXOR and AND
    byte | byte
    constant word | constant word
    constant long | constant long
    word | word (zpreg)

  • <<, >>: bit shifting; shifting pads the result with zeroes
    byte << byte
    word << byte (zpreg)
    constant word << constant byte
    constant long << constant byte

  • >>>>: shifting a 9-bit value and returning a byte; a >>>> b is equivalent to (a & $1FF) >> b
    word >>>> constant byte

Decimal arithmetic operators

These operators work using the decimal arithmetic and will not work on Ricoh CPU's. The compiler issues a warning if these operators appear in the code.

  • +', -': decimal addition/subtraction
    byte +' byte
    constant word +' constant word
    constant long +' constant long
    word +' word (zpreg)

  • *': decimal multiplication
    constant *' constant

  • <<', >>': decimal multiplication/division by power of two
    byte <<' constant byte

Comparison operators

These operators (except for !=) can accept more than 2 arguments. In such case, the result is true if each comparison in the group is true. Note you cannot mix those operators, so a <= b < c is not valid.

WARNING: Currently in cases like a < f() < b, f() may be evaluated an undefined number of times (the current implementation calls it twice, but do not rely on this behaviour).

  • ==: equality
    byte == byte
    simple word == simple word
    simple long == simple long

  • !=: inequality
    byte != byte
    simple word != simple word
    simple long != simple long

  • >, <, <=, >=: inequality
    byte > byte
    simple word > simple word
    simple long > simple long

Currently, >, <, <=, >= operators perform unsigned comparison if none of the types of their arguments is signed, and fail to compile otherwise. This will be changed in the future.

Assignment and in-place modification operators

WARNING: Unlike other languages, Millfork does not provide any guarantees about how many times the left hand side will be evaluated. An expression of form a[f()] += b may call f an undefined number of times.

  • =: normal assignment
    mutable byte = byte
    mutable word = word mutable long = long

  • +=, +'=, |=, ^=, &=: modification in place
    mutable byte += byte
    mutable word += word
    mutable long += long

  • <<=, >>=: shift in place
    mutable byte <<= byte
    mutable word <<= byte
    mutable long <<= byte

  • <<'=, >>'=: decimal shift in place
    mutable byte <<= constant byte
    mutable word <<= constant byte
    mutable long <<= constant byte

  • -=, -'=: subtraction in place
    mutable byte -= byte
    mutable word -= simple word
    mutable long -= simple long

  • *=: multiplication in place
    mutable byte *= constant byte
    mutable byte *= byte (zpreg)

  • *'=: decimal multiplication in place
    mutable byte *'= constant byte

Indexing

While Millfork does not consider indexing an operator, this is a place as good as any to discuss it.

An expression of form a[i], where i is an expression of type byte, is:

  • when a is an array: an access to the i-th element of the array a

  • when a is a pointer variable: an access to the byte in memory at address a + i

Those expressions are of type byte. If a is any other kind of expression, a[i] is invalid.

If the zeropage register is enabled, i can also be of type word.

Built-in functions

  • not: negation of a boolean expression
    not(bool)

  • nonet: expansion of an 8-bit operation to a 9-bit operation
    nonet(byte + byte)
    nonet(byte +' byte)
    nonet(byte << constant byte)
    nonet(byte <<' constant byte)
    Other kinds of expressions than the above (even nonet(byte + byte + byte)) will not work as expected.

  • hi, lo: most/least significant byte of a word
    hi(word)