This invention relates in general to the field of performing mathematical functions using electronic devices. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for performing mathematical functions using polynomial approximations in a system comprising a rectangular aspect ratio multiplier circuit.
Computation of elementary and transcendental mathematical functions such as sine, cosine, logarithms and others is a required function in modern computing systems. These functions may be evaluated for any point in their domain by any of several methods. Best known among these methods are the Taylor series expansion, the Chebyshev series expansion, the CORDIC method and derivatives, Brigg's method for logarithms, Newton's method and polynomial approximation. These methods vary principally in the primitive operations they require, such as addition,and multiplication and factorial evaluation , and the number of iterations they require to produce a result of given accuracy. An important consideration of all of these methods is the precision required of the argument and of intermediate computations to preserve accuracy and other valuable properties in the result.
Most popular in integrated circuit implementations for calculators and microprocessors is the CORDIC method. The popularity of this method stems from its need to use only the relatively simple primitive operations of addition and shift operations, its thorough development in the literature, and the wide range of trigonometric and exponential functions which may be evaluated with the method. Especially relevant is the efficiency with which addition and shift operations are implemented using electronic integrated circuit techniques.
The disadvantages of the CORDIC method are: (1) the large number of constants required to achieve a given level of accuracy, usually one for every two bits of precision in the result, (2) the large number of iterations required to produce a result, one for each constant, (3) the large number of primitive operations per iteration, usually three per iteration, and (4) the rapid accumulation of round-off error in the result, usually one unit in the last place per iteration. As a result, for example, the computation of the sine function to 64 bits would require 32 constants, 32 iterations, 96 additionaladdition cycles and provide only 59 bitesbits of accuracy in the result.
In contrast to the CORDIC method, the other methods mentioned above are used infrequently in integrated circuit implementations due primarily to the primitive operations required which usually include a multiply as well as an add in each iteration. The consequence of this requirement is that evaluation must proceed very slowly, due to the use of add-shift type multiplies, or considerable circuitry and, therefore, chip surface area must be devoted to the implementation of a fast multiplier. The circuit complexity of the array multiplier is further complicated or, equivalently, the evaluation speed correspondingly reduced by the requirement of these other algorithms to perform full-precision multiplication of the argument by itself or by a constant.
Other disadvantages attendant to the methods other than the CORDIC method include the need for many iterations, slow or non-uniform convergence to the result, oscillatory behavior around the infinitely precise values resulting in non-monotonic behavior of the approximateapproximated function, and the requirement for additional primitive operations such as division and factorials . The consequence of these disadvantages is larger circuit size and complexity, slower evaluation of the desired function and degraded accuracy.
Accordingly, a need has arisen for a method of function approximation which requires relatively few iterations to achieve a given level of accuracy, converges quickly and uniformly, accumulates round-off error in a relatively slow manner, and produces monotonic approximations to monotonic functions.
In accordance with the present invention, a method of mathematical function approximation is provided which substantially eliminates or reduces disadvantages and problems associated with prior methods of function approximation.
The function approximation method of the present invention comprises three major steps: (1) reduction of the starting argument x to a range suitable for computation of the approximation; (2) computation of the approximation using the reduced argument u ; and (3) transformation of the computed result to a final value which corresponds to the function evaluated at the starting argument x.
More specifically, the present invention uses a polynomial based approximation to a mathematical function. The polynomial approximation is made to a function of reduced argument and uses Horner's rule to obtain a numerical value for the polynomial. Evaluation of the polynomial is performed by repeated use of a rectangular aspect ratio (short by full) multiplier with an adder port.
An important technical advantage of the present invention inheres in the fact that it uses a rectangular aspect ratio multiplier. The use of the rectangular aspect ratio multiplier saves time during several steps in the function approximation process. The operations of multiplication, division and square root involved in the transformation and polynomial evaluation processes are performed quickly through the use of new methods associated with the rectangular aspect ratio multiplier. Additionally, the short by longfull multiplier can perform full precision multiplication operations with less than full by full multiplies, depending on the number of significant bits in the operands, thus saving time and the space ordinarily required to implement a full precision multiplier.
A further technical advantage of the present invention inheres in the fact that it uses fewer constants than other approximation methods to achieve a given level of accuracy. Thus, fewer iterations are necessary to evaluate the polynomial approximation to the function and less constant storage space is needed.
Another technical advantage of the present invention inheres in the fact that the approximation to the function preserves monotonic behavior of the function. The invention thus overcomes objections of non-monotonicity frequently made regarding the use of polynomial methods of function approximation.
A final technical advantage of the present invention inheres in the fact that the constants, the arguments to the function, as well as the function are scaled. This scaling allows for a less complex multiplier to be used in the evaluation of the approximation. This scaling also allows for full precision multiplies between the constants and the arguments to be performed in less clock cycles than would be necessary for unscaled constants and arguments.
A more complete understanding of the method of the present invention may be acquired by referring to the detailed description and claims when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The method of calculating mathematical functions according to the present invention may be implemented in a numeric processing system which comprises a multiplier circuit with the capability to perform the primitive operations of addition, multiplication, division and the square root function.
A constant store 28 is also coupled to the system bus 16. The constant store 28 permanently stores and supplies constants which are used in the implementation of the method of mathematical function evaluation of the present invention as controlled by the control and timing circuit 18. Also coupled to the system bus 16 is a mantissa ALU 30. The mantissa ALU 30 receives the mantissa portion of operands from the system bus 16 and performs addition, subtraction and rounding operations on these operands as required by functions being implemented in system 10. The mantissa ALU comprises a variable bit shifter 32 which can shift operands right or left any number of bit positions. The variable bit shifter 32 is coupled to the system bus 16 as well as the exponent ALU 26. The variable bit shifter outputs seven bits of information to the exponent ALU 26 in order to communicate a shift count to the exponent ALU 26. Accordingly, the exponent associated with a mantissa shifted by variable bit shifter 5232may be incremented or decremented as necessary.
A multiplier circuit 34 is also coupled to system bus 16. One possible embodiment of multiplier circuit 34 will be discussed specifically with reference to
In summary, system 10 represents a system which comprises the necessary control and data management circuitry to implement the method of mathematical function evaluation of the present invention. Two important elements are required for the implementation of the method of the present invention. The method requires a control and storage circuit for implementing routines for each mathematical function to be evaluated. Further, the method requires a multiplier circuit capable of performing efficient and accurate multiplication, division, and square root operations . System 10 illustrated in
System bus 42 is seventy-four bits wide and has the thirty-five most significant bits coupled directly to a C-latch 44. The next most significant thirty six bits of the system bus 42 are coupled to C-latch 44 through a first multiplexer 46 (MUX 46). First MUX 46 is also coupled to the most significant thirty five bits of system bus 42.
The eighteen most significant bits of system bus 42 are coupled directly to a D-latch 48. The next most significant 51 bits of system bus 42 are divided into three groups of seventeen bits each of which are each respectively coupled to a second MUX 50, a third MUX 52 and a fourth MUX 54. An additional input of MUX's 50, 52 and 54 is also coupled to the seventeen most significant bits of system bus 42. The outputs of MUX's 50, 52 and 54 are coupled to three additional inputs to D-latch 48.
System bus 42 is coupled to the input of an A-latch 56. The output of A-latch 56 is coupled to an ADDER INPUT of multiplier core 58.
A constant port 60 is coupled to one input of a fifth MUX 62. Three 18-bit outputs and one 17-bit output of the C-latch 44 are coupled to four inputs of the fifth MUX 62. A single bit is input from the fifth MUX 62 to the MULTIPLIER CARRY-IN input of multiplier core 58. Eighteen bits are input from the fifth MUX 62 into the MULTIPLIER input of multiplier core 58. Two bits are output from the fifth MUX 62 to a control input of shifter 84.
Sixty-nine bits are output from the D-latch 48 into a first converter 64. Converter 64 operates to convert a non-redundant sixty-nine bit wide number into a signed digit number. Therefore, sixty-nine data bits and sixty-nine signed bits are output by first converter 64 into a sixth MUX 66. Seventy data bits and seventy signed bits are output by the sixth MUX 66 into the MULTIPLICAND input of multiplier core 58.
Eighty-eight data bits and eighty-eight signedsign bits are output from the product output of the multiplier core 58 to a shifter 68. Shifter 68 operates to shift the result output by the multiplier core 58 to the right one place, to the left one place or pass without shifting. The most significant sign bit and data bit are truncated after appropriate correction. The remaining eighty-seven data bits and eighty-seven sign bits are output by shifter 68 into a result latch 70. The eighty-seven data bits and eighty-seven sign bits are stored in result latch 70 and are output to three separate locations. The seventy-five most significant data bits and the seventy-five most significant sign bits are output to a second converter 72. Second converter 72 converts the signed digit number at its inputs into a 74-bit number in non-redundant format and outputs this number to an E-latch 44. The E-latch 74 is coupled to the system bus 42.
The seventy-one least significant data bits and the seventy-one least significant sign bits output by the result latch 70 are input into an indicator 76. The indicator 76 is coupled to the converter 72 and to a status block 78. The eighty-seven data bits and eighty-seven sign bits output by the result latch 70 are input into a shifter 80. The output of shifter 80 is coupled to a feedback latch 82. The output of the feedback latch is coupled to a shifter 84. The output of the shifter 84 comprises eighty-eight data bits and eighty-eight sign bits and is coupled to the FEEDBACK input of the multiplier core 58. Seventy data bits and seventy sign bits output by the feedback latch 82 are also input into sixth MUX 66 such that they may be selectively input into the MULTIPLICAND input of multiplier core 58.
Multiplier core 58 is shown in greater detail in the schematic diagram illustrated in FIG. 3. Generally, multiplier core 58 comprises a series connection of a times-three adder level indicated generally at 86, a Booth recoder level indicated generally at 88, a partial product generator level indicated generally at 90, and three levels of adders indicated generally at 92, 94 and 96.
The seventy data bits and seventy sign bits of the MULTIPLICAND INPUT are input into a times-three adder 98 which forms times-three adder level 86. Times-three adder 98 is operable to add inprovide the multiples of three intotimes the multiplicand to the partial product generator level 90. Multiplication operations involving multiples of one, two and four may be accomplished using shift operations. However, multiplies of three require adder logic which is present in the times-three adder 98.
The single bit of the MULTIPLIER CARRY-IN and the eighteen bits of the MULTIPLIER input are input in parallel to the Booth recoder level 88 which comprises Booth recoders 100, 102, 104, 106, 108 and 110. Each of the Booth recoders 100-110 receive three bits of the multiplier from the multiplier input and are coupled to an adjoining Booth recoder through a single bit carry line coupled to its input. The first Booth recoder 100 has its carry-in input coupled to the single bit of the MULTIPLIER CARRY-IN input.
The output of each of the Booth recoders 100 through 110 are coupled respectively to one of the partial product generators 112, 114, 116, 118, 120 and 122. The MULTIPLICAND input is also coupled in parallel to each of the partial product generators 112 through 122. In addition, the output of times-three adder 98 is coupled to each of the partial product generators 112 through 122. In this manner, the Booth encoded multiplier, the even multiplies of the multiplicand by 1, 2 and 4, and the appropriately added multiplesmultiple of three of the multiplicand, are all combined inavailable to the partial product generators to form the partial products to be added together to form the 88-bit product.
Accordingly, the outputs of each of the partial product generators 112 through 122 are input into three level-one adders 124, 126 and 128. In addition, a fourth level-one adder 130 has as its input the seventy-four bit ADDER input and the eighty-eight signedsign and data bit input of the FEEDBACK input. The fourth level-one adder 130 helps to illustrate an important technical advantage of the array multiplier of the present invention.
Because of the ability to access the adder tree formed by the level-one adderadders 92, the level-two adderadders 94 and the level-three adder 96, the array multiplier of the present invention is able to perform operations of the form AX+B+C, where A is the 18-bit multiplier, X can be a seventy bit signed digit multiplicand, B can be a 74-bit non-redundant number and C can be a 70-bit75-bit signed digit number.
The outputs of the level-one adders 124 and 126 comprise seventy-five data bits and seventy-five sign bits each, and are input into a first level-two adder 132. The output of level-one adder 128 comprises seventy-five data bits and seventy-five sign bits and is input into one side of the second level-two adder 134. The output of fourth level-one adder 130 comprises eighty-eight sign bits and eighty-eight data bits, and is input into the remaining side of second level tolevel-two adder 134.
The output of first level tolevel-two adder 132 comprises eighty-one sign bits and eighty-one data bits, which are input into a first side of a level-three adder 136. Also input into the first side of level-three adder 136 are two bits which are input from a constant port 138. The output-ofoutput of second level tolevel-two adder 134 comprises eighty-eight sign bits and eighty-eight data bits which are input into a second side of level threelevel-three adder 136. The output of level threelevel-three adder 136 comprises eighty-eight sign bits and eighty-eight data bits and comprises the final product output which is output by the multiplier core 58 to the shifter 68 which was shown in FIG. 1.
In operation, the C-latch 44 generally contains the multiplier of a multiplication operation. The D-latch 48 generally contains the multiplicand. The product of the multiplication operation is generally contained in the E-latch 74. The feedback latch 82 is used to contain the output of the multiplier core 58 in signed digit format so that it may be used in subsequent multiplication operations.
Most data transfers to and from the multiplier circuit 40 are across the seventy-fiveseventy-four bit wide system bus 42. For example, the C-latch 44 and the D-latch 48 are both loaded from the system bus 42. It should be understood that
The signed digit notation used in the multiplier circuit 40 uses a digit set comprising −1, 0 and 1. These digits are defined by a sign bit and a data bit according to the following table:
A high sign bit and a low data bit which would comprise a “−0” is not an allowed condition.
The basic signed digit adder used in the three levels of adders 92, 94 and 96 used in multiplier core 58, each accepts two signed digit numbers, a carry-in and a borrow-in. Each adder reduces these inputs to a single signed digit number, a carry-out and a borrow-out.
The speed of an adder circuit is normally limited by the propagation of the carry signal from one bit to the next. This is because the carry-out signal from one bit of an adder is dependent on the carry-in to that adder. Prior art advances in adder circuits generally have to do with shortening this path by such means as carry-look-ahead or carry-select circuits. Because of the novel structure of the multiplier circuit used in conjunction with the method of the present invention, it can be seen in the truth table shown in
An important consideration of the signed digit adder associated with the truth table shown in
Additionally, the adders used in the multiplier circuit 40 are sufficiently wide such that the data being added does not require the generation of a borrow or carry. However, since the data format is redundant, the truth table shown in
Any non-redundant number of a given number of bits in length may have an unlimited number of bits when expressed in non-redundantredundant format since there can be an unlimited number of leading ones. This conversion is shown in symbolic notation as follows:
nx . . . n3, n2, n1, n0=. . . rx+2, rx+1, rx . . . r3, r2, r1, r0
This generation of leading ones can present a problem when trying to truncate leading signed bits from a number. The redundant number can easily be truncated to x+1 signed bits with the following correction:
if rx+2={circle around (5)}0, then invert the sign of rxrx+1 which results in
nx . . . n3, n2, n1, n0=. . . rx+1, rx . . . r3, r2, r1, r0
Thus, the entire string of signed bits more significant than signed bit x−1rx is reduced through this conversion to a 0 single signed bit x−1rx+1 called the overflow bit. The overflow bit must be included in the data path of the multiplier circuit of the present invention in order to provide for the truncation of leading signed bits.
An additional consideration results when it is necessary to not merely truncate leading bits of a signed digit number, but actually separate the signed digit number into a most significant portion and a least significant portion without affecting the accuracy of each portionvalue of their sum or incurring the speed penalties incurred in a conversion of the entire bit string to non-redundant format. This procedure may occur, for example, in the conversion of a real number to a binary coded decimal (BCD) number where each BCD digit is resident in the most significant portion of a bit string during the conversion process. The additional consideration inheres in the fact that the least significant portion may require a borrow into the most significant portion, affecting the values in each portion. The least significant portion may be converted using the overflow bit described above. The most significant portion may be converted by determining the sign of the least significant portion and if negative, decrementing the most significant portion.
Multiplier circuit 40 may be used in the following manner to implement the method of mathematical function evaluation of the present invention through the fast and efficient performance of the multiplication, division and square root operations. C-latch 44 is seventy-one bits wide and is loaded from the system bus 42. It can be loaded in three ways. The entire register can be loaded from the most significant portion of the system bus 42. Secondly, the most significant thirty-five bits can be independently loaded from the most significant part of the system bus 42. Finally, the least significant thirty-six bits of the C-latch 44 can be loaded independently from the most significant part of the system bus 42. The C-latch 44 is divided into quadrants so it can drive the short side of the multiplier core 58. The fourth quadrant, which is the most significant quadrant of the C-latch 44 is seventeen bits, which is one bit shorter than the remaining quadrants which are each eighteen bits in width.
The fifth MUX 5262selects from various bits of the C-latch 44 or from the constant generator 60 to drive the MULTIPLEXERMULTIPLIER input and the MULTIPLEXERMULTIPLIER CARRY IN input of the multiplier core 58. It also provides a control input to shifter 84 which is used in a special 19 bit wide multiply that will be discussed herein.
The D-latch 48 is sixty-nine bits wide and is divided into quadrants. The D-latch 48 can be loaded in four different ways. The entire D-latch 48 may be loaded with the most significant bits of the system bus 42 or each of the three least significant quadrants of the D-latch 48 may be independently loaded with the seventeen most significant bits of the system bus 42.
The converter 64 converts the non-redundant value in the D-latch 48 into a signed digit number by appending a sign bit to each data bit. The sign bits can all be set to 0 corresponding to a positive number or all set to 1 for each data bit which is a one corresponding to a negative number. Additionally, each of the three least significant quadrants independently can be set negative while the remaining quadrants are positive.
The long side of the multiplier core 58 is driven by the sixth MUX 66. Sixth MUX 66 selects between seventy bits input from the feedback latch 82 in signed digit format, or sixty-nine bits input by the converter 64. If the data from the converter 64 is selected, the most significant bit or overflow bit is set to zero. The entire contents of the D-latch 48 or any of the four quadrants of the D-latch 48 can be negated as required.
The output of the multiplier core 58 passes through a shifter 68 which is capable of shifting the product left or right by one or passing the product through unshifted. After passing through shifter 68, the most significant bit of the product is truncated and the product is loaded into the result latch 70. Data from the result latch 70 may be optionally shifted left seventeen bits by shifter 80 as it is loaded into the feedback latch 82. The output of the feedback latch 82 may be conditionally negated. The output of the feedback latch 82 may drive the long side of the multiplier core 58 through the sixth MUX 66 or may be input into the FEEDBACK input of the multiplier 58 through shifter 84. Shifter 84 can pass data through unshifted, shift left by one or two, or shift right by 18-bit positions.
The operations of shifting left by one or two bit positions are only performed by shifter 84 when it is known from the operations being performed that the one or two most significant data bits of the data paths are not occupied by significant data. The shift right by 18 operation is used for purposes of aligning portions of a product during multiplication operations which will be described herein.
The indicator 76 determines the sign and magnitude of certain fields of the eighty-seven signed bits output by the result latch 70. During a multiplication operation, the indicator 76 keeps track of the least significant signed bits of the product to determine if any non-zero bits are thrown away and, if so, the sign of the discarded number. The indicator 76 is operable to determine the sign of at least significant portion of the data path during the separation of the data bits into two portions during real to BCD conversion version as discussed previously. The indicator 76 functions to set the overflow bit if the least significant portion of the data path is negative. During division and square root operations, the indicator 76 determines whether a remainder value is non-zero and if non-zero, whether it is positive or negative. This information is stored by indicator 76 in a status block 78. Status block 78 is also coupled to remaining components of the system through control lines (not shown) and to the converter 72. The status block 78 communicates to the converter 72 whether a large radix digit value has been determined to be positive or negative such that the converter 72 may appropriately complement the non-redundant representation of the value prior to loading it in the E-latch 74 as required by the division and square root operations discussed herein.
The converter 72 receives a positive or negative signed digit value from the most significant seventy-five bits output by the result latch 70, along with the sign and indicator bits from the indicator 76, and converts this data to a positive 74-bit non-redundant number. This number is conditionally stored in the 74-bit E-latch 74 with the indicator bit in the least significant location. An important feature of the present invention inheres in the capability of converter 72 to detect a maximum value output by result latch 70 indicating an overflow out of the data path. Converter 72 is operable to saturate the value output to E-latch 74 if an overflow is present after conversion of the maximum value to non-redundant format. The output of the E-latch 74 is coupled to the system bus 1242. The E-latch 74 is operable to output to the system bus 42 either a full 74 bit value or a truncated 17 bit large radix digit value as required by operations discussed herein.
Referring to
The following truth table describes the recoding of the multiplier bits into the modified Booth format as they are input to each of the partial product generators 112 through 122.
Within each partial product generator 112 through 122, multiplying by one, two or four is simply accomplished by shifting the multiplicand. Multiplying by three is accomplished by the timestimes-three three adder 98 which adds one times the multiplicand to two times the multiplicand. The output of adder 98 is input to all of the partial product generators 112 through 122. In this manner, one, two, three and four times the multiplicand is available at the inputs of each of the partial product generators 112 through 122.
Because signed digit notation is used, the negation of a value to be output by each of partial product generators 112 through 122 is simple. Negation of a number is accomplished by inverting each sign bit which has a corresponding data bit which is a one. Thus, each partial product generator has at its inputs the multiplicand and three times the multiplicand and is operable to select one, two, three or four times the multiplicand, or output zero, and selectively negate the output to provide the full range of +4 to −4 times the multiplicand.
The outputs of the partial product generators 112 through 122 are seventy-two bits wide. Each of the level one adders 124, 126 and 128 add the output of two partial product generators offset by three. The outputs of level one adders 124, 126 and 128 are seventy five bits wide. The level one adder 130 adds the ADDER INPUT to the FEEDBACK INPUT with thetheir most significant bits aligned. Level two adder 132 adds the outputs of level one adders 124 and 126. The outputs of level one adders 124 and 126 are offset by six, and the output of level two adder 132 is eighty-one bits wide. Level two adder 134 adds the outputs of level one adders 128 and 130 with their most significant bits aligned. The output of level two adder 134 is eighty-eight bits wide. The two level two adders 132 and 134 are added together in the level three adder 136 with their least significant bits aligned. The constant port 138 can generate the constants two and three halves which can also be added in the level three adder 136, as required by Newton-Raphson approximation methods used in the division and square root operations as described herein. The final product of the multiplier core 58 is output by the level three adder 136 and is eighty-eight bits wide.
In operation, a full precision multiplication operation is accomplished in four passes through the multiplier core 58 followed by a conversion cycle. The input operands are loaded from the system bus 42. A sixty-nine bit multiplicand is loaded into the D-latch 48 and a seventy-one bit multiplier is loaded into the C-latch 44. Both input operands are in non-redundant format. The A-latch 56 and the feedback latch 82 are both cleared.
In the first pass, the least significant eighteen bits of the multiplier are selected by multiplexer 62 and pass to the multiplier inputMULTIPLIER INPUT of the multiplier core 58. Multiplexer 8262initially sets the MULTIPLIER CARRY-IN input to zero. The multiplicand in the D-latch 48 is converted into a signed digit number in the converter 64 by setting all the sign bits of the multiplicand to zero. This value is selected by multiplexer 66 which appends a zero to the most significant end. The resulting seventy bitsbit signed digit number then becomes the MULTIPLICAND input to the multiplier core 58. The MULTIPLICAND input remains unchanged tothrough the rest of the multiplication procedure. Since the A-latch 56 and the feedback latch 82 are cleared, the ADDER input and the FEEDBACK INPUT to the multiplier core 58 are zero. The shifter 68 truncates the most significant bit of the 88-bit product output by the multiplier core 58 which is guaranteed to have a non-significant value by the modified Booth recoding performed in multiplier core 58 and outputs the resulting eighty-seven bit signed digit number to the result latch 70. The result latch 70 then contains the partial product, the seventy-five most significant bits of which are then sent to the feedback latch 82 and the least significant eighteen bits of which are sent to the indicator 76. The output of the feedback latch 82 is shifted right eighteen places in shifter 84 and passed to the FEEDBACK input of the multiplier core 58. Only the most significant seventy-five bits of the partial product are latched into feedback latch 82. The twelve least significant bits of the partial product are truncated during the loading of feedback latch 82. Six additional bits are lost during the 18 bit right shift operation performed by shifter 84. These eighteen bits stored in the result latch 70 which are not returned to the FEEDBACK input are read by the indicator 76. The indicator 76 comprises a sign and a zero latch that record if the 18 truncated bits are zero, and the sign of a non-zero value.
In the second and third passes, the second and third least significant eighteen bits of the multiplier are selected respectively by multiplexer 52 and passed to the of the MULTIPLIER input of the multiplier core 58. The MULTIPLIER CARRY-IN is set equal to the most significant bit of the previous quadrant of the C-latch 44. The MULTIPLICAND input and the ADDER INPUT remain unchanged. The FEEDBACK input contains the partial product from the previous pass shifted right by eighteen to properly align it. The most significant part of the new partial product is stored in the feedback latch 82. The least significant eighteen bits are checked by the indicator 76. If any ones are set in the eighteen bits that are passed to the indicator 76, the sign and zero latches are updated appropriately or else the old values of these latches are retained.
The fourth pass tothrough the multiplier core 58 is similar to the previous passes with the most significant seventeen bits of the multiplier being selected by the multiplexer 62. The final segment of the multiplier is a 17-bit value allowing the most significant bit of the multiplier input to be set to zero. As the final product is present in result latch 70, the most significant seventy-five bits of the result latch 70 are sent to the converter 72. The remaining twelve bits are input to the indicator 76 which updates the zero and sign latches contained therein. The resulting value of the sign latch is passed to the converter 72. The converter 72 converts the signed digit result into a non-redundant format. If the indicator 76 has truncated a negative number, this result is decremented by one. After the seventy-five bit number has been converted, the most significant bit will always be equal to zero. The remaining seventy-four bits are latched in the E-latch 74 such that the result may be read across the system through the system bus 42. The remaining system can also read the final value of the zero latch contained in the indicator 76 which indicates whether any bits were truncated, and therefore, whether the result is precise.
The multiplier circuitry is also extremely useful in performing a novel method of division used in the method of the present invention. This method of division is described in full in Applicants' co-pending application “Method and Apparatus for Performing Division Using a Rectangular Aspect Ratio Multiplier”, Ser. No. 07/389,051, filed Aug. 2, 1989 (now U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,046,038 and 5,307,303). The following hardware was added to the multiplier circuit 40 to efficiently divide using the aforementioned method.
The first part of the divide operation uses the Newton-Raphson method of reciprocal evaluation. This method starts with the seed value from a look-up table and iterates that value with the following equation until the desired accuracy is requiredachieved.
y″=y′(2−yy′)
where,
The equation is evaluated with two passes through the multiplier core 58. The divisor is loaded into the D-latch 48. The seed value of the reciprocal is loaded into the C-latch 44. When the value in the D-latch 18 is converted to signed digit notation in converter 64, it is negated. The constant generator 138 adds in a constant two into the level three adder 136. The product of the first pass is equal to (2−yy′). The most significant seventy-five bits of this product are stored in the feedback latch 82. The second pass through the multiplier core 58 multiplies the result of the first pass times the starting approximation of the reciprocal.
Because the multiplier 58 can accept the MULTIPLICAND input in signed digit format, a conversion to non-redundant format is not required, and the two passes through the multiplier core 58 can be on back to back clock cycles. On the second pass through multiplier core 2858, the multiplier input remains constant while multiplexer 3666selects the feedback latch 82 to supply the MULTIPLICAND input.
The approximate reciprocal is then iterated an additional time using two additional passes through multiplier core 58. On the final pass through multiplier core 58, a reciprocal bias adjustment factor is added through the A-latch 56 and the ADDER input.
The division algorithm requires a multiplication by a nineteen bit reciprocal value to have enough accuracy to calculate the 17-bit quotient digit value. Because a small reciprocal bias adjustment factor is added to the final approximate reciprocal before truncation to obtain the short reciprocal to guarantee that it is never too small, it is possible that the nineteen bit value will overflow into a twenty bit value.
The input operand to the short side of the multiplier core 58 for the nineteen or twenty bit multiply, is the field of the C-latch 44where the short reciprocal has been placed which corresponds to the second least significant eighteen bits of the C-latch 44 shifted left by one place. The nineteen or twenty bit multiply is accomplished by using the FEEDBACK input into the multiplier core 58. The eighteen least significant bits are fed to the MULTIPLEXERMULTIPLIER input of the multiplier core 58. The multiplicand must be loaded into the feedback latch 82. Multiplexer 3666selects the feedback latch 82 and passes it to the MULTIPLICAND input. Additional copies of the multiplicand are shifted left by one or two in the shifter 84 and input into the FEEDBACK input of the multiplier core 58. Because the upper and lower bounds of the reciprocal are known, the eighteenth and nineteenth bits of the aforementioned field of C-latch 14 can control the shifter 84. The following table shows all possible combinations of the twenty bit reciprocal and that there are only three possible combinations of the eighteenth and nineteenth bit.
The firstleast significant eighteen bits of the multiplier go through the modified Booth recording process in modified Booth recoders 100 through 110. Bits 4919and 5020are accounted for with the FEEDBACK input to the multiplier core 58. The setting of the eighteenth bit requires an addition of one times the multiplicand through the FEEDBACK input because the MULTIPLIER INPUTinput is encoded using a modified Booth's algorithm and setting the eighteenth bit normally causes the multiplier core 58 to output a negative number. During a typical full precision multiplication operation, the negative value is corrected on the next pass through the multiplier core 58 by incrementing the MULTIPLIER input and thereby adding in the multiplicand one additional time. However, in this case, there is no second pass through the multiplier core 58 so the correction is accomplished with the multiplicand added through the FEEDBACK input.
All the possible combinations of bits 18, 19 and 20 are shown below along with the number of times the multiplicand must be added in the FEEDBACK input. Since only one and two times the multiplicand is required, the hardware required to generate the number is only shifter 84. It can also be seen from the following table that bits 18 and 19 are all that is required to control the operation of shifter 84.
The data path width required for these operations is not at all obvious. It is important to understand the data path width required by a normal multiplication operation performed using multiplier circuit 40. Signed digit representation of a number requires a single overflow bit to be appended to the data path. This single bit is truncated when the result is converted to a non-redundant number. For the purpose of this discussion, the overflow bit will not be counted in the data path width. The process of modified Booth recoding centers the product about zero so that the magnitude of the product of a modified Booth recoded multiplier is one bit smaller than a normal multiplier. This bit is traded for a sign bit. This also implies that the product needs to be corrected on a subsequent cycle. In the multiplier circuit of the present invention, if the short side input is eighteen bits, it produces a signed partial product and a carry bit which can be corrected on a subsequent cycle. On the final pass through multiplier core 58 during a full precision multiplication operation, the multiplier is normally limited to seventeen bits. A 17×69-bit multiply can produce an 86-bit result, (with the overflow bit) which is exactly the width of the bus coupling the result latch 70 to the shifter 80.
The 20-bit multiply operation described above is accomplished without increasing the 86-bit bus to hold the result. This means that three extra bits must be accounted for. The first of the three bits is trivial. Shifter 5868always does a shift right by one place during the 20 bit multiplication operation. One bit is lost in the least significant end of the data path because of this right shift, but since this multiplication operation is only used for calculating an estimate of the quotient truncated to seventeen bits, this bit will be truncated anyway.
A second bit is dependent upon the novel division method used in conjunction with the multiplier circuit used in connection with the method of mathematical function evaluation of the present invention. For example, in the division operation, the 20-bit multiply is used to calculate the 17-bit quotient digit value by multiplying the reciprocal of the divisor by the dividend or partial remainder. The dividend is always shifted right making the long side sixty-eight bits instead of sixty-nine bits, which results in a 16-bit or 17-bit quotient digit value. On subsequent passes, the partial remainder may be sixty-nine bits in width. However, the method of division is such that this only occurs when the reciprocal is small enough so that the product of the reciprocal and the partial remainder will never result in an 18-bit digit.
The argument discussed above is only valid if the quotient digit value is calculated using the exact reciprocal. It is in this manner that the third bit is explained. Because an estimate of the reciprocal is used, the rounding of that estimate may cause a quotient digit value to be slightly larger than seventeen bits. The division method is such that the actual exact value of a quotient digit is never greater than seventeen bits. Therefore, the multiplier circuit of the present invention recognizes an overflow out of the multiplier, and forces the answer to be the largest possible 17-bit number using the saturation capability of converter 72 as discussed previously.
The method of division used in conjunction with the method of mathematical function evaluation of the present invention continues by loading the dividend into the D-latch 48. An appropriate constant is selected from the constant port 60 by multiplexer 62 such that the result latch 70 is equal to the dividend divided by two, which is passed through the shifter 80 and latched into the feedback latch 82. The divisor is then loaded into the D-latch 48. The short reciprocal of the divisor which was calculated in the aforementioned portion of the division method remains in the least significant half of the C-latch 44.
The first quotient digit value is calculated by multiplying the short reciprocal by the dividend in multiplier core 58 using the 20 bit multiply operation described above. The product is latched into result latch 70 after being shifted right one bit position in shifter 58. The product is converted to non-redundant format in converter 72 and loaded into the E-latch 74. The E-latch 44 truncates the quotient digit value to seventeen bits and places it on the system bus 42. The quotient digit value is loaded from the system bus 42 into the most significant half of the C-latch 44 without disturbing the short reciprocal value which remains in the least significant half of the C-latch 44.
The first partial remainder is then calculated. The multiplexer 62 selects the first quotient digit value from the most significant half of the C-latch 44. The converter 64 negates the divisor which is stored in the D-latch 48, which is selected by multiplexer 66 to drive the MULTIPLICAND input of the multiplier core 58. The value equal to one-half the dividend is passed unchanged through shifter 84 from feedback latch 82 to drive the FEEDBACK input to the multiplier core 58. The first quotient digit value is then multiplied by the negated divisor and subtracted from the dividend in multiplier core 58. This entire process occurs in a single clock cycle. The subtraction operation cancels the seventeen most significant bits of the result. The value in the result latch 70 is then shifted left by 17-bit positions and loaded into the feedback latch 82. This process is repeated using each successive partial remainder in place of the dividend in the described iteration until the desired number of quotient digit values are obtained.
It is possible for the value of the remainder to be negative. If the remainder is negative, the next quotient digit value will also be negative. However, the quotient digit value is passed to the MULTIPLIER input to calculate the next remainder, and the MULTIPLIER input cannot accept negative numbers. The indicator 76 determines the sign of the remainder and sets a sign status flag in the status block 78 when the remainder is negative. The converter 72 complements the quotient digit value based on the sign status flag such that the quotient digit value is always converted to a positive number. The converter 72 is also controlled by the sign status flag so that the sign of the multiplicand is always opposite the sign of the value stored in feedback latch 82 when each new remainder is calculated.
Because the reciprocal bias adjustment factor is added to the reciprocal before it is truncated, it is possible for the quotient digit value to overflow into an 18-bit number. Since it is known by the characteristics of the division method that the quotient digit value is always less than an 18-bit value, an overflow into an 18-bit number is detected in the converter 72 and is replaced by the largest possible 17-bit number as discussed previously.
The multiplier circuit used in conjunction with the method of the present invention can also be used in conjunction with a novel method of performing the square root function which is fully described in Applicants' co-pending application, “Method and Apparatus for Performing the Square Root Function Using a Rectangular Aspect Ratio Multiplier”, Ser. No. 07/402,822, filed Sept. 5, 1989 (now U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,060,182 and 5,159,566).
Essentially, the method of performing the square root function used in conjunction with the method of the present invention is very similar to the method described above for performing the division function. However, there are some features of the multiplier circuit 40 which are used in the square root function which are not used in the division function. For example, the multiplier circuit 40 must have the ability to selectively negate each root digit value as it is calculated. This is accomplished by the sub-division of the D-latch 48 into four quadrants, the most significant quadrant being eighteen bits in width and the remaining three quadrants being seventeen bits in width.
The method of performing the square root function used in conjunction with multiplier circuit 1040uses a modified Newton-Raphson approximation to iteratively generate an approximation of the reciprocal of the square root of the operand. The equations iterated are given as follows:
y″=y′(3/2−y/2(y′)2)
where,
Each iteration of the above equations are evaluated with three passes through the multiplier core 58 and two iterations are required such that the value of the reciprocal may be generated with six passes through multiplier core 58. Prior to the first pass, a seed value for the reciprocal is loaded from a look-up table (not shown) through system bus 42 into the C-latch 44. The operand is loaded initially in the D-latch 48.
For the first pass of the first iteration, the MUX 66 selects the operand stored in D-latch 48 and inputs it through the MULTIPLICAND input into multiplier core 58. The reciprocal seed value is input from the C-latch 44 through the MUX 62 into the MULTIPLIER input of multiplier core 58. Multiplier core 58 then forms the product of the seed value and the operand corresponding to y•y′or y/2•y′ in the above equations. This product is then loaded into feedback latch 5282. The division by two for even exponents is performed by a shift right by one place in shifter 68.
On the second pass, the prior product present in the feedback latch 82 is again multiplied by the seed value stored in C-latch 44. During the formation of this product, the product is negated and added to the constant three-halves output from constant port 138 in adder 136 to form the (3/2−y(y′)2) and (3/2−y/2(y′)2 (3/2−y/2(y′)2) terms of the above equations. The appropriate one of these terms is then loaded into the feedback latch 82.
The third pass through multiplier core 58 completes the iteration by forming the product of the seed value stored in C-latch 44 and the value stored in feedback latch 82. This final product is then converted in converter 72 and loaded in C-latch 44. The operand remains in the D-latch feedback latch 82 and the circuit 40 is thereby initialized for an additional iteration of the above-described equations.
On the final pass through multiplier core 58 during the second iteration of the above equations, a reciprocal bias adjustment factor is added to the value for the reciprocal to guarantee that, when used to generate root digit values, the reciprocal value will always produce the exact value of the root digits or a value that is one unit in the last place too large. Shifter 68 performs a shift left by one bit position to allow for the maximum number of significant data bits in the data path, the most significant data bit being expendable due to the normalization of the operand and reciprocal values. The final value of the reciprocal is converted to nonredundant format in converter 72 and the most significant bits are loaded into the least significant half of C-latch 44 via E-latch 74 and system bus 42. During the conversion of the reciprocal, the operand is multiplied by the constant one-half output by constant port 60 and shifter 68 performs a shift right by one place for even exponents and performs a no shift for odd exponents. The value output from shifter 68 is then loaded into feedback latch 82 and is equal to the value for one-half the operand for odd exponents and equal to one quarter the operand for even exponents.
An additional requirement of the square root method used in conjunction with the method of the present invention is that the previously calculated root digit value must be used in the later calculations. The previous root digit value exists in the most significant seventeen bits of the system bus 42 after its calculation. This root digit value must be able to be loaded into any of the quadrants of D-latch 48. Hence, circuit 40 comprises multiplexers 50, 52 and 54 which allow for this selective loading. Additionally, as discussed previously, each of the quadrants of the D-latch 48 can be negated if the sign latch within the status block 78 indicated a negative remainder indicating a negative digit.
A further requirement of the square root method is the ability to selectively add in digit bias adjustment factors to the product output by multiplier core 58 prior to the step of truncation which creates each root digit value. These correction factors are input through the A-latch 56 into the ADDER input of multiplier core 58 such that their addition does not incur any further clock cycles than are otherwise necessary for the square root method.
The multiplier circuit 40 in conjunction with the remainder of system 10 thus has the ability to perform the addition,and multiplication, division, and square root operations requiredemployed by the method of mathematical function evaluation using segmented polynomial based approximation.
Referring now to
Generally, the method shown in
For the purposes of exposition, we suppose that the approximation of f(x) hasis recovered from the form fa(x′)=F*x′*P(z). Here x′ is a reduced argument obtained from the input argument x, z is a reduced argument obtained from xx′ which can be represented as a fixed-point number, P(z) is a function of z, and F is a scale factor which allows P(z) to be computed using fixed-point arithmetic. One technique of determining approximations fa(x)fa(x′) with this form is to choose P(z) to be a polynomial with the property that it minimizes the maximum magnitude of [f(x′)/{F*x′}]-P(z) on an interval which may be a subset of the original interval (a,b). Such approximations are called minimax approximations. For minimax approximations the maximum magnitude of the difference between f(x′)/{F*x′} and P(z) decreases as the degree of P(z) is allowed to increase. More general forms of approximation can be used provided that the determination of the value of the approximation involves only the computation ofperforming loads, shifts, adds, multiplies, divides andor square roots which are quickly and accurately performed by system 10 when used in conjunction with the method of the present invention.
In prior art, it would not have been efficient to use such approximation because their evaluation is costly in terms of computation time. The cost of evaluating such an approximation is the sum of the times it takes to perform the loads from the constant table and the adds, multiplies, divides, and square roots needed to compute the value of the approximation fa(x′) and perform its transformation. For example if P(z)=a0+a1*z+a2*z2 is a polynomial in z of degree 2 with coefficients a0, a1, a2 stored in the constant table, then evaluation of P(z) by Horner's rule proceeds as follows:
In prior art, it would not have been efficient to use such forms of approximation as described herein. The present method requires first that a multiplication as well as an addition be performed in each iteration, second, that transformations be performed which may involve addition, multiplication, division, and square root, and third, that full by full multiplication operations be used. If the techniques of the present method had been implemented using the circuitry of the prior art, evaluation would proceed very slowly because of the use of add and shift type multipliers, or considerable circuitry would have to have been devoted to the implementation of a fast multiplier. The array multiplier circuit would have to be more complex because of the need to always perform full by full multiplications of the argument by itself or by a constantanother value.
In the present system, the prior art problems are solved through the use of a rectangular arrayaspect ratio multiplier such as multiplier circuit 40 having an ADDER input capable of quickly performing a multiplication and an addition in one iteration. Additionally, the rectangular arrayaspect ratio multiplier used in conjunction with the method of the present invention is capable of performing fast multiplication, division and square root and, through the use of appropriate scaling of operands, is capable of saving time by performing accurate multiplies using less than full by full multiplies.
The method of polynomial evaluation will be described with reference to an arraya rectangular aspect ratio multiplier circuit, such as circuit 40 having a multiplier core, such as multiplier core 58, having an aspect ratio of 19×69 bitsapproximately 1:4. It should be understood, however, that the method of the present invention is applicable to a wide range of coupled multiplier circuits with adder ports. The particular multiplier circuit with adder port described herein is an embodiment chosen for the purposes of teaching the present invention, and should not be construed to limit the scope of the present invention.
Let x be a binary floating-point number in the range −∞<x<+∞. Binary floating-point numbers are represented using three distinct fields: the sign S, the significand M, and the biased exponent E. These fields are used to represent a number equal to (−1)S*(M)*2(E-BIAS). The BIAS is an arbitrary constant added tosubtracted from the exponent field with the property that all numbers which are stored have biased exponents E which are nonnegative integers. The significant M of nonzero numbers is always a number greater than or equal to 1 and less than 2. A pair of examples will illustrate the merits of this device when used to evaluate approximations of the form fa(x′)=F*x′*P(z).
Consider first the computation of the sine of an input argument x. The approximation process for the sine of an arbitrary argument x begins by reducing the argument x as follows. First the argument is made nonnegative by using the identity sin(x)=−sin(−x). This means that if x is negative, then x should be replaced by −x and the answer determined by the approximation method should be negated and returned as the value of the sine of x. Second the argument is reduced to a value x′, whose magnitude is less than π/4 by repeated subtractions of the constant π/2. This repeated subtraction operation is closely related to exact division of x by π/2. The reduced argument x′ obtained from this process is the exact remainder after division of x by π/2 produces the nearest integer quotient. As shown in
The form of the approximation used to approximate the sine of x′ for an argument x′ whose magnitude is less than π/4 is
fa(x′)=x′*P(z)
where z=(x′)2 is the square of the reduced argument x′.
Here P(z) is the polynomial
P(z)=a0+a1*z+z2*z2+a3*Z3+a4*z4+a5*z5+z6*z6+z7*z7
of degree 7 whose coefficients, in decimal form, are presented in FIG. 8. For arguments x′ whose magnitude is less than π/4, the magnitude of the relative error in approximating sin(x′) by x′*P(z) is less than 10(−20.7). Once the coefficients of P(z) are determined, they are taken from constant store 28 via system busses 16 and 42 and input as necessary into multiplier circuit 40 shown in
The determination of the value of the approximation P(z) using Horner's rule proceeds as follows. Horner's rule for the evaluation of P(z) requires the following seven iterations:
The term P6 is then converted and loaded into the C-latch 44 through system bus 42. After being latched into the C-latch 44, P6 is input through MUX 62 into the multiplier core 58 through the MULTIPLIER input. The D-latch 48 once again inputs the argument z through the converter 64 and the MUX 66 into the MULTIPLICAND input of multiplier core 58 and the product of P6 and the argument z is formed. The coefficient a5 is simultaneously input into the ADDER input of the multiplier core 58 such that a5 is added to the product P6*z forming P5=P6*z+a5. This process will continue until the coefficient a0 is added to the prior product P1*z forming P0=P1*z+a0. At this point the final result is converted and the final value of P(z) is present in the E-latch 74. Once the value of P(z) has been determined then the value of the approximation fa(x′)=x′*P(z) of the sine of x′ is determined by computing the product of x′ and P(z) using a floating-point multiply.
Dependent on the mathematical function f(x) being computed, it may be necessary to apply transformations to the computed value of fa(x′) to recover the required approximation to f(x) as shown in step 148. As shown in
The method of the present invention allows the multiplications and additions z*a7+a6, z*P6+a5, . . . , z*P1+a0 which occur in Horner's rule to be calculated quickly. The method of the present invention also allows the rapid computation of square roots such as
which are required as shown in FIG. 7. The method of the present invention is also capable of saving time by performing less than full by full multiplies.
An important consideration associated with the method of the present invention is that reduction of the argument x must be performed very accurately to minimize the error introduced into the reduced arguments x′ and z. Such errors are irrecoverable since the actual computation of the approximation is performed using the reduced argument. This reduction of the argument x is usually performed to the highest available precision accommodated by the system to accommodate the wide dynamic range of the argument x. This accurate reduction of the input argument x is also necessary for the computation of other functions.
If the available precision of the system is sufficiently greater than that needed in the final result, then the frequently cited nonmonotonic behavior of polynomial based approximations can be eliminated. The elimination of the nonmonotonic behavior of polynomial based approximation is possible because performing each add, subtract, multiply, divide, and square root to a precision greater than that needed in the final result restricts the nonmonotonic behavior to bits which will be discarded when the value of the final result is determined. For example, when the sine function is approximated for arguments x whose magnitude is less than π/4, any approximation whose relative error has magnitude less than 10(−19.7)10(−19.7) will be monotonic when chopped to its leading 64 significant bits.
A second example illustrating the performance improvement of the present method using the rectangular aspect ratio multiplier is the method for the computation of the base 2 logarithm or log2(x) of an input argument x. The general approach of argument reduction, computation of approximation, and result transformation used for the sine function is also used for the base 2 logarithm function. However, understanding the merit of the method of the present invention requires examination of the argument reduction and polynomial evaluation phasephases of the process.
It is usually considered an error to compute the value of the base 2 logarithm for arguments x which are not positive. Therefore we will consider the approximation of the base 2 logarithm for arguments x which are positive numbers. The process of argument reduction for the base 2 logarithm of the argument x begins by first separating the binary floating point representation of the argument x into its significand M and its unbiased exponent E. The sign S of x is not needed since x is always positive. As stated previously, the significand of a binary floating-point number is a number greater than or equal to 1 and less than 2. Dependent on whether the significand M of the input argument x is greater than 2√{square root over (2)} or less than or equal to 2√{square root over (2)}, the value of y is computed as presented in FIG. 10 and is a number which is greater than √2/2−1 and less than or equal to √2−1. As presented in
The approximation of the base 2 logarithm of x may continue by computing w=(x′)2, the square of x′, and approximating the base 2 logarithm of x byemploying x′*Q(w) where Q(w) is the polynomial
Q(w)=b0+b1*w+b2*w2+b3*w3+b4*w4+b5*w5+b6*w6+b7*w7+b8*w8+b9*w9
of degree 9 whose coefficients, in decimal form, are presented in FIG. 11. The relative error in approximating log(x) byemploying x′Q(w) is less than 10(−21.7). As for the evaluation of the approximation of the sine function, Horner's method can be used to evaluate the polynomial Q(w) and uses 9 iterations each involving one multiply and one add. If Q(w) is to be evaluated using fixed-point arithmetic then each of its coefficients b0, b1, . . . , b9 must be divided by 4 thereby allowing the value of Q(w) to be determined using fixed-point arithmetic. A consideration of the hexadecimal form of these coefficients, when divided by 4, is presented in FIG. 12 and leads to the premature conclusion that the ability of the method of the present invention to use short by full multiplications cannot be utilized since the hexadecimal form of none of these coefficients have sufficiently many leading zeros.
To illustrate how the ability of the present invention to use short by full multiplies can be utilized we begin by noting that the magnitude of x′, is never greater than 0.172. Therefore if z=32*(x′)2 is 32 times the square of x′, then the magnitude of z is never greater than 0.947. The approximation of the base 2 logarithm of x can be written as 4*x′*P(z) where P(z) is the polynomial
P(z)=a0+a1*z+a2*z2+a3*z3+a4*z4+a5*z5a6*z6+z7*z7+a8*z8+a9*z9
P(z)=a0+a1*z+a2*z2+a3*z3 +a4*z4+a5*z5+a6*z6+a7*z7 +a8*z8+a9*z9
whose coefficients, in hexadecimal form, are presented in FIG. 13. The potential to use short by longfull multiplies is evident from this table. Consideration of
To further facilitate an understanding of the invention disclosed herein for computing approximations of a plurality of mathematical functions,
In
As shown in
Argument transformation circuitry 204 provides another transformed argument (e.g., the aforementioned argument x′) directly to approximating circuitry 208, which also receives from polynomial evaluation circuitry 206 a value generated through evaluation of a polynomial approximation. Approximating circuitry 208 uses the transformed argument received from argument transformation circuitry 204 and the value received from polynomial evaluation circuitry 206 to determine a value of an approximating function. Result recovery circuitry 210, coupled to approximating circuitry 208, recovers a result comprising the approximation of a mathematical function from the value determined by approximating circuitry.
As is further illustrated by
In summary, the present invention provides an improved method for computation of approximations to mathematical functions. The method comprises three main steps: (1) reducing the magnitude of a starting argument x to a range where polynomial base approximations are more effective; (2) computing the result using this reduced argument and the special facilities of the proposed circuit; and (3) transformation of the computed result to a value which approximates the value of the mathematical function being approximated.
An important technical advantage of the method of the present invention inheres in its use of a rectangular aspect ratio multiplier with an associated adder port and associated circuitry to perform rapid and accurate multiplication, division, and square root operations. The additional adder port feature enables the system to perform a multiplication and an addition in one iteration. These features enable the system to evaluate a polynomial of degree N using Horner's rule in N iterations and to perform the required multiplication operations more quickly by utilizing the leading zeros in one of the numbers to be multiplied.
Another advantageous feature of the invention is its use of relatively few constants to achieve a given level of accuracy. This feature allows the system to allocate less space to the storage of constants in the constant store.
The present method also overcomes the objections of nonmonotonic behavior frequently made regarding the use of polynomial based methods of function approximation. The nonmonotonic behavior of polynomial based approximations can be eliminated by performing each of the add, multiply, divide, and square root operations to a precision sufficiently greater than that required by the precision of the final answer.
A further time and space saving feature is the scaling of constants and operands through transformations which may be performed quickly using the rectangular aspect ratio multiplier. This scaling allows for a less complex multiplier to be used in the multiplication of constants and operands with no associated loss of accuracy. This scaling also allows for the answer of a full by full multiply to be performed as an equivalent short by full multiply which requires fewer clock cycles.
Although the method of the present invention has been described in connection with a particular circuit embodiment, it should be understood that the method of function approximation of the present invention is equally applicable to a large number of multipliers with widely varying aspect ratios and widely varying numbers of adder ports using numbers using either signed digitredundant or non-redundant formats. The disclosure of the particular circuit described herein is for the purposes of teaching the present invention and should not be construed to limit the scope of the present invention which is solely defined by the scope and spirit of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4338675 | Palmer et al. | Jul 1982 | A |
4774685 | Samuels | Sep 1988 | A |
4789955 | Umetani | Dec 1988 | A |
4888721 | Kondoh et al. | Dec 1989 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 07416110 | Oct 1989 | US |
Child | 08109577 | US |