.th ECVT III 4/30/73 .sh NAME ecvt \*- output conversion .sh SYNOPSIS .ft B jsr pc,ecvt .s3 jsr pc,fcvt .s3 char *ecvt(value, ndigit, decpt, sign) .br double value; .br int ndigit, *decpt, *sign; .s3 char *fcvt(value, ndigit, decpt, sign) .br .li ... .ft R .sh DESCRIPTION .it Ecvt is called with a floating point number in fr0. .s3 On exit, the number has been converted into a string of ascii digits in a buffer pointed to by r0. The number of digits produced is controlled by a global variable \fI\*_ndigits\fR. .s3 Moreover, the position of the decimal point is contained in r2: r2=0 means the d.p. is at the left hand end of the string of digits; r2>0 means the d.p. is within or to the right of the string. .s3 The sign of the number is indicated by r1 (0 for +; 1 for \*-). .s3 The low order digit has suffered decimal rounding (i. e. may have been carried into). .s3 From C, the .it value is converted and a pointer to a null-terminated string of \fIndigit\fR digits is returned. The position of the decimal point is stored indirectly through \fIdecpt\fR (negative means to the left of the returned digits). If the sign of the result is negative, the word pointed to by \fIsign\fR is non-zero, otherwise it is zero. .s3 \fIFcvt\fR is identical to \fIecvt\fR, except that the correct digit has had decimal rounding for F-style output of the number of digits specified by \fI\(*_ndigits\fR. .sh "SEE ALSO" printf(III) .sh BUGS