Q (number format)

Summary

The Q notation is a way to specify the parameters of a binary fixed point number format. For example, in Q notation, the number format denoted by Q8.8 means that the fixed point numbers in this format have 8 bits for the integer part and 8 bits for the fraction part.

A number of other notations have been used for the same purpose.

Definition edit

Texas Instruments version edit

The Q notation, as defined by Texas Instruments,[1] consists of the letter Q followed by a pair of numbers m.n, where m is the number of bits used for the integer part of the value, and n is the number of fraction bits.

By default, the notation describes signed binary fixed point format, with the unscaled integer being stored in two's complement format, used in most binary processors. The first bit always gives the sign of the value(1 = negative, 0 = non-negative), and it is not counted in the m parameter. Thus, the total number w of bits used is 1 + m + n.

For example, the specification Q3.12 describes a signed binary fixed-point number with a w = 16 bits in total, comprising the sign bit, three bits for the integer part, and 12 bits that are the fraction. That is, a 16-bit signed (two's complement) integer, that is implicitly multiplied by the scaling factor 2−12

In particular, when n is zero, the numbers are just integers. If m is zero, all bits except the sign bit are fraction bits; then the range of the stored number is from −1.0 (inclusive) to +1.0 (exclusive).

The m and the dot may be omitted, in which case they are inferred from the size of the variable or register where the value is stored. Thus, Q12 means a signed integer with any number of bits, that is implicitly multiplied by 2−12.

The letter U can be prefixed to the Q to denote an unsigned binary fixed-point format. For example, UQ1.15 describes values represented as unsigned 16-bit integers with an implicit scaling factor of 2−15, which range from 0.0 to (216−1)/215 = +1.999969482421875.

ARM version edit

A variant of the Q notation has been in use by ARM. In this variant, the m number includes the sign bit. For example, a 16-bit signed integer would be denoted Q15.0 in the TI variant, but Q16.0 in the ARM variant.[2][3]

Characteristics edit

The resolution (difference between successive values) of a Qm.n or UQm.n format is always 2n. The range of representable values depends on the notation used:

Range of representable values in Q notation
Notation Texas Instruments Notation ARM Notation
Signed Qm.n −2m to +2m − 2n −2m−1 to +2m−1 − 2n
Unsigned UQm.n 0 to 2m − 2n 0 to 2m − 2n

For example, a Q15.1 format number requires 15+1 = 16 bits, has resolution 2−1 = 0.5, and the representable values range from −214 = −16384.0 to +214 − 2−1 = +16383.5. In hexadecimal, the negative values range from 0x8000 to 0xFFFF followed by the non-negative ones from 0x0000 to 0x7FFF.

Math operations edit

Q numbers are a ratio of two integers: the numerator is kept in storage, the denominator   is equal to 2n.

Consider the following example:

  • The Q8 denominator equals 28 = 256
  • 1.5 equals 384/256
  • 384 is stored, 256 is inferred because it is a Q8 number.

If the Q number's base is to be maintained (n remains constant) the Q number math operations must keep the denominator   constant. The following formulas show math operations on the general Q numbers   and  . (If we consider the example as mentioned above,   is 384 and   is 256.)

 

Because the denominator is a power of two, the multiplication can be implemented as an arithmetic shift to the left and the division as an arithmetic shift to the right; on many processors shifts are faster than multiplication and division.

To maintain accuracy, the intermediate multiplication and division results must be double precision and care must be taken in rounding the intermediate result before converting back to the desired Q number.

Using C the operations are (note that here, Q refers to the fractional part's number of bits) :

Addition edit

int16_t q_add(int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
    return a + b;
}

With saturation

int16_t q_add_sat(int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
    int16_t result;
    int32_t tmp;

    tmp = (int32_t)a + (int32_t)b;
    if (tmp > 0x7FFF)
        tmp = 0x7FFF;
    if (tmp < -1 * 0x8000)
        tmp = -1 * 0x8000;
    result = (int16_t)tmp;

    return result;
}

Unlike floating point ±Inf, saturated results are not sticky and will unsaturate on adding a negative value to a positive saturated value (0x7FFF) and vice versa in that implementation shown. In assembly language, the Signed Overflow flag can be used to avoid the typecasts needed for that C implementation.

Subtraction edit

int16_t q_sub(int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
    return a - b;
}

Multiplication edit

// precomputed value:
#define K   (1 << (Q - 1))
 
// saturate to range of int16_t
int16_t sat16(int32_t x)
{
	if (x > 0x7FFF) return 0x7FFF;
	else if (x < -0x8000) return -0x8000;
	else return (int16_t)x;
}

int16_t q_mul(int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
    int16_t result;
    int32_t temp;

    temp = (int32_t)a * (int32_t)b; // result type is operand's type
    // Rounding; mid values are rounded up
    temp += K;
    // Correct by dividing by base and saturate result
    result = sat16(temp >> Q);

    return result;
}

Division edit

int16_t q_div(int16_t a, int16_t b)
{
    /* pre-multiply by the base (Upscale to Q16 so that the result will be in Q8 format) */
    int32_t temp = (int32_t)a << Q;
    /* Rounding: mid values are rounded up (down for negative values). */
    /* OR compare most significant bits i.e. if (((temp >> 31) & 1) == ((b >> 15) & 1)) */
    if ((temp >= 0 && b >= 0) || (temp < 0 && b < 0)) {   
        temp += b / 2;    /* OR shift 1 bit i.e. temp += (b >> 1); */
    } else {
        temp -= b / 2;    /* OR shift 1 bit i.e. temp -= (b >> 1); */
    }
    return (int16_t)(temp / b);
}

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Appendix A.2". TMS320C64x DSP Library Programmer's Reference (PDF). Dallas, Texas, USA: Texas Instruments Incorporated. October 2003. SPRU565. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-12-22. Retrieved 2022-12-22. (150 pages)
  2. ^ "ARM Developer Suite AXD and armsd Debuggers Guide". 1.2. ARM Limited. 2001 [1999]. Chapter 4.7.9. AXD > AXD Facilities > Data formatting > Q-format. ARM DUI 0066D. Archived from the original on 2017-11-04.
  3. ^ "Chapter 4.7.9. AXD > AXD Facilities > Data formatting > Q-format". RealView Development Suite AXD and armsd Debuggers Guide (PDF). 3.0. ARM Limited. 2006 [1999]. pp. 4–24. ARM DUI 0066G. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-11-04.

Further reading edit

  • Oberstar, Erick L. (2007-08-30) [2004]. "Fixed Point Representation & Fractional Math" (PDF). 1.2. Oberstar Consulting. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-11-04. Retrieved 2017-11-04. (Note: the accuracy of the article is in dispute; see discussion.)

External links edit

  • "Q-Number-Format Java Implementation". GitHub. Archived from the original on 2017-11-04. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  • "Q-format Converter". Archived from the original on 2021-06-25. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
  • "Q Library (C implementation)". GitHub. Retrieved 2024-03-05.