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02-Data Representation

The document discusses concepts related to data representation in binary and hexadecimal formats. It covers topics like binary numbers, converting between decimal, binary and hexadecimal, integer storage sizes, binary addition and subtraction, signed integers using two's complement notation. Examples are provided to explain how to convert between different number systems and perform arithmetic operations like addition and subtraction in binary. The disadvantages of other signed number representations like signed magnitude are also discussed.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views

02-Data Representation

The document discusses concepts related to data representation in binary and hexadecimal formats. It covers topics like binary numbers, converting between decimal, binary and hexadecimal, integer storage sizes, binary addition and subtraction, signed integers using two's complement notation. Examples are provided to explain how to convert between different number systems and perform arithmetic operations like addition and subtraction in binary. The disadvantages of other signed number representations like signed magnitude are also discussed.

Uploaded by

fakhar_fast
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Basic Concepts

Computer Organization and Assembly Language


Lec#2

Computer Science Department

National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences Islamabad


Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 1
Next …
 Welcome to COAL 2020
 Assembly-, Machine-, and High-Level Languages
 Assembly Language Programming Tools
 Programmer’s View of a Computer System
 Data Representation

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 2
Data Representation
 Binary Numbers
 Hexadecimal Numbers
 Base Conversions
 Integer Storage Sizes
 Binary and Hexadecimal Addition
 Signed Integers and 2's Complement Notation
 Binary and Hexadecimal Subtraction
 Carry and Overflow
 Character Storage

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 3
Binary Numbers

 Digits are 1 and 0


1 = true
0 = false
 MSB – most significant bit
 LSB – least significant bit
 Bit numbering:
MSB LSB
1011001010011100
15 0

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 4
Binary Numbers
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
 Each digit (bit) is either 1 or 0 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20

 Each bit represents a power of 2:

Every binary
number is a
sum of powers
of 2

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 5
Converting Binary to Decimal

Weighted positional notation shows how to calculate the


decimal value of each binary bit:
Decimal = (dn-1  2n-1) + (dn-2  2n-2) + ... + (d1  21) + (d0  20)
d = binary digit

binary 00001001 = decimal 9:


(1  23) + (1  20) = 9

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 6
Convert Unsigned Decimal to Binary

 Repeatedly divide the decimal integer by 2. Each


remainder is a binary digit in the translated value:

least significant bit

most significant bit

stop when
37 = 100101 quotient is zero
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 7
Hexadecimal Integers
Binary values are represented in hexadecimal.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 8
Converting Binary to Hexadecimal
• Each hexadecimal digit corresponds to 4 binary bits.
• Example: Translate the binary integer
000101101010011110010100 to hexadecimal:

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 9
Converting Hexadecimal to Decimal
 Multiply each digit by its corresponding power of 16:
 Decimal = (d3  163) + (d2  162) + (d1  161) +
(d0  160)
 d = hexadecimal digit
 Examples:
Hex 1234 = (1  163) + (2  162) + (3 
161) + (4  160) =
 Decimal 4,660
Hex 3BA4 = (3  163) + (11 * 162) + (10 
161) + (4  160) =
 Decimal 15,268
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 10
Converting Decimal to Hexadecimal
 Repeatedly divide the decimal integer by 16. Each
remainder is a hex digit in the translated value:

least significant digit

most significant digit

stop when
quotient is zero

Decimal 422 = 1A6 hexadecimal


Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 11
Integer Storage Sizes
byte 8

word 16
Standard sizes: doubleword 32

quadword 64

What is the largest unsigned integer that may be stored in 20 bits?

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 12
Binary Addition
 Start with the least significant bit (rightmost bit)
 Add each pair of bits
 Include the carry in the addition, if present

carry: 1

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 (4)

+ 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 (7)

0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 (11)
bit position: 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 13
Hexadecimal Addition
 Divide the sum of two digits by the number base (16).
The quotient becomes the carry value, and the
remainder is the sum digit.
1 1
36 28 28 6A
42 45 58 4B
78 6D 80 B5

21 / 16 = 1, remainder 5

Important skill: Programmers frequently add and subtract the


addresses of variables and instructions.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 14
Signed Integers
 Several ways to represent a signed number
 Sign-Magnitude
 Biased
 1's complement
 2's complement
 Divide the range of values into 2 equal parts
 First part corresponds to the positive numbers (≥ 0)
 Second part correspond to the negative numbers (<
0)
 Focus will be on the 2's complement representation
 Has many advantages over other representations
 Used widely in processors to represent signed
integers

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 15
Representation of negative numbers
 Is a representation of negative numbers possible?
 Unfortunately:
 you can not just stick a negative sign in front of a binary
number. (it does not work like that)
 There are three methods used to represent
negative numbers.
 Signed magnitude notation
 Excess notation
 Two’s complement notation

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 16
Signed Magnitude Representation
 Unsigned: - and + are the same.
 In signed magnitude
 the left-most bit represents the sign of the integer.
– 0 for positive numbers.
– 1 for negative numbers.
 The remaining bits represent to magnitude of the
numbers.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 17
Example

 Suppose 10011101 is a signed magnitude representation.


 The sign bit is 1, then the number represented is negative

position 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Bit pattern 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1
contribution 24 23 22 20
-

 The magnitude is 0011101 with a value 24+23+22+20= 29


 Then the number represented by 10011101 is –29.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 18
Exercise 1

1. 3710 has 0010 0101 in signed magnitude notation. Find


the signed magnitude of –3710 ?

2. Using the signed magnitude notation find the 8-bit


binary representation of the decimal value 2410 and -
2410.

3. Find the signed magnitude of –63 using 8-bit binary


sequence?

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 19
Disadvantage of Signed Magnitude
 Addition and subtractions are difficult.
 Signs and magnitude, both have to carry out the
required operation.
 They are two representations of 0
 00000000 = + 010
 10000000 = - 010
 To test if a number is 0 or not, the CPU will need to see
whether it is 00000000 or 10000000.
 0 is always performed in programs.
– Therefore, having two representations of 0 is inconvenient.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 20
Signed-Summary
 In signed magnitude notation,
 The most significant bit is used to represent the sign.
 1 represents negative numbers
 0 represents positive numbers.
 The unsigned value of the remaining bits represent The
magnitude.
 Advantages:
 Represents positive and negative numbers
 Disadvantages:
 two representations of zero,
 Arithmetic operations are difficult.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 21
Excess Representation
(cont.)
– For a given fixed number of bits Excess
Number to
the range is remapped such that Value Notation
store
roughly half the numbers are 0 0000 -8
negative and half are positive. 1 0001 -7
2 0010 -6
3 0011 -5
Example: (as left) 4 0100 -4
5 0101 -3
Excess 8 -> notation for 4 bit numbers 6 0110 -2
7 0111 -1
 Binary value = 8 + excess-8 value 8 1000 0
9 1001 1
 MSB can be used as a sign bit, but 10 1010 2
 If MSB =1, positive number 11 1011 3
 If MSB =0, negative number 12 1100 4
 Excess Representation is also called 13 1101 5
bias 14 1110 6
15 1111 7

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 22
Biased-Excess-N
 Uses a pre-specified number N as a biasing value.
 A value is represented by the unsigned number which is
N greater than the intended value.
0 is represented by N,
 −N is represented by the all-zeros bit pattern.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 23
Two's Complement Representation
 Positive numbers
 Signed value = Unsigned value 8-bit Binary Unsigned Signed
 Negative numbers value value value
00000000 0 0
 UnSigned value = Signed value + 2n
00000001 1 +1
 n = number of bits
00000010 2 +2
 Negative weight for MSB
... ... ...
 Another way to obtain the signed
value is to assign a negative weight 01111110 126 +126
to most-significant bit 01111111 127 +127
10000000 128 -128
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0
10000001 129 -127
-128 64 32 16 8 4 2 1
... ... ...
11111110 254 -2
= -128 + 32 + 16 + 4 = -76
11111111 255 -1
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 24
Forming the Two's Complement
starting value 00100100 = +36

step1: reverse the bits (1's complement) 11011011

step 2: add 1 to the value from step 1 + 1

sum = 2's complement representation 11011100 = -36


Sum of an integer and its 2's complement must be zero:
00100100 + 11011100 = 00000000 (8-bit sum)  Ignore Carry

The easiest way to obtain the 2's complement of a


binary number is by starting at the LSB, leaving all the
0s unchanged, look for the first occurrence of a 1. Leave
this 1 unchanged and complement all the bits after it.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 25
Sign Bit
Highest bit indicates the sign. 1 = negative, 0 = positive
sign bit

1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0
Negative

0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Positive

If highest digit of a hexadecimal is > 7, the value is negative


Examples: 8A and C5 are negative bytes
A21F and 9D03 are negative words
B1C42A00 is a negative double-word
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 26
Sign Extension
Step 1: Move the number into the lower-significant bits
Step 2: Fill all the remaining higher bits with the sign bit
 This will ensure that both magnitude and sign are correct
 Examples
Sign-Extend 10110011 to 16 bits
10110011 = -77 11111111 10110011 = -77

Sign-Extend 01100010 to 16 bits


01100010 = +98 00000000 01100010 = +98

 Infinite 0s can be added to the left of a positive number


 Infinite 1s can be added to the left of a negative number
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 27
Two's Complement of a Hexadecimal
 To form the two's complement of a hexadecimal
Subtract each hexadecimal digit from 15
Add 1
 Examples:
2's complement of 6A3D = 95C2 + 1 = 95C3
2's complement of 92F0 = 6D0F + 1 = 6D10
2's complement of FFFF = 0000 + 1 = 0001
 No need to convert hexadecimal to binary

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 28
Binary Subtraction
 When subtracting A – B, convert B to its 2's complement
 Add A to (–B)
00001100 00001100
– 00000010 + 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 (2's complement)
0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 (same result)
 Carry is ignored, because
 Negative number is sign-extended with 1's
 You can imagine infinite 1's to the left of a negative number
 Adding the carry to the extended 1's produces extended zeros

Practice: Subtract 00100101 from 01101001.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 29
Hexadecimal Subtraction
 When a borrow is required from the digit to the left,
add 16 (decimal) to the current digit's value
16 + 5 = 21

-1 11
C675 C675
- +
A247 5DB9 (2's complement)
242E 242E (same result)

 Last Carry is ignored


Practice: The address of var1 is 00400B20. The address of the next
variable after var1 is 0040A06C. How many bytes are used by var1?

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 30
Ranges of Signed Integers
The unsigned range is divided into two signed ranges for positive
and negative numbers

Practice: What is the range of signed values that may be stored in 20 bits?

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 31
Carry and Overflow
 Carry is important when …
 Adding or subtracting unsigned integers
 Indicates that the unsigned sum is out of range
 Either < 0 or >maximum unsigned n-bit value
 Overflow is important when …
 Adding or subtracting signed integers
 Indicates that the signed sum is out of range
 Overflow occurs when
 Adding two positive numbers and the sum is negative
 Adding two negative numbers and the sum is positive
 Can happen because of the fixed number of sum bits

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 32
Carry and Overflow Examples
 We can have carry without overflow and vice-versa
 Four cases are possible
1 1 1 1 1 1

0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 15 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 15
+ +
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 248 (-8)

0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 23 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 263
(+7)
Carry = 0 Overflow = 0 Carry = 1 Overflow = 0

1 1 1 1

0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 79 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 218 (-38)
+ +
0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 64 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 157 (-99)

1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 143 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 375
(-113) (-137)
Carry = 0 Overflow = 1 Carry = 1 Overflow = 1
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 33
Character Storage
 Character sets
 Standard ASCII: 7-bit character codes (0 – 127)
 Extended ASCII: 8-bit character codes (0 – 255)
 Unicode: 16-bit character codes (0 – 65,535)
 Unicode standard represents a universal character
set
 Defines codes for characters used in all major languages
 Used in Windows-XP: each character is encoded as 16 bits
 UTF-8: variable-length encoding used in HTML
 Encodes all Unicode characters
 Uses 1 byte for ASCII, but multiple bytes for other characters
 Null-terminated String
 Array of characters followed by a NULL character

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 34
Printable ASCII Codes
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
2 space ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
4 @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
5 P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _
6 ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
7 p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~ DEL

 Examples:
 ASCII code for space character = 20 (hex) = 32 (decimal)
 ASCII code for 'L' = 4C (hex) = 76 (decimal)
 ASCII code for 'a' = 61 (hex) = 97 (decimal)
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 35
Control Characters
 The first 32 characters of ASCII table are used for control
 Control character codes = 00 to 1F (hex)
 Not shown in previous slide
 Examples of Control Characters
 Character 0 is the NULL character  used to terminate a string
 Character 9 is the Horizontal Tab (HT) character
 Character 0A (hex) = 10 (decimal) is the Line Feed (LF)
 Character 0D (hex) = 13 (decimal) is the Carriage Return (CR)
 The LF and CR characters are used together
 They advance the cursor to the beginning of next line
 One control character appears at end of ASCII table
 Character 7F (hex) is the Delete (DEL) character

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 36
Terminology for Data Representation
 Binary Integer
Integer stored in memory in its binary format
Ready to be used in binary calculations
 ASCII Digit String
A string of ASCII digits, such as "123"
 ASCII binary
String of binary digits: "01010101"
 ASCII decimal
String of decimal digits: "6517"
 ASCII hexadecimal
String of hexadecimal digits: "9C7B"
Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 37
Summary
 Assembly language helps you learn how software is constructed at
the lowest levels
 Assembly language has a one-to-one relationship with machine
language
 An assembler is a program that converts assembly language
programs into machine language
 A linker combines individual files created by an assembler into a
single executable file
 A debugger provides a way for a programmer to trace the execution of
a program and examine the contents of memory and registers
 A computer system can be viewed as consisting of layers. Programs
at one layer are translated or interpreted by the next lower-level layer
 Binary and Hexadecimal numbers are essential for programmers
working at the machine level.

Basic Concepts Computer Organization and Assembly Language – NUCES Ameen Chilwan 38

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