6.9 KiB
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 thei
-th element of the arraya
-
when
a
is a pointer variable: an access to the byte in memory at addressa + 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 (evennonet(byte + byte + byte)
) will not work as expected. -
hi
,lo
: most/least significant byte of a word
hi(word)