CVL

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Revision as of 14:39, 20 April 2022 by SMcNeill (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The CVL function decodes a 4-byte STRING generated by MKL$ (or read from a file) to LONG numeric values. {{PageSyntax}} : {{Parameter|result&}} = CVL({{Parameter|stringData$}}) {{PageDescription}} * ''CV'' functions (CVD, CVS, CVI, CVL, CVDMBF, CVSMBF) are used to convert values encoded by ''MK$'' functions (MKD$, MKS$, MKI$, MKL$, MKDMBF$, MKSMBF$). * '''QB64''' has _CV and _MK$ functions wh...")
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The CVL function decodes a 4-byte STRING generated by MKL$ (or read from a file) to LONG numeric values.


Syntax

result& = CVL(stringData$)


Description


Examples

Example 1: 4 byte ASCII character strings show how CVL multipliers convert MKL$ values into a 4 byte LONG value.

  
PRINT CVL(CHR$(1) + STRING$(3, 0)) 'ASC(CHR$(1)) * 1 = 1
PRINT CVL(CHR$(0) + CHR$(1) + STRING$(2, 0)) 'ASC(CHR$(1)) * 256 = 256
PRINT CVL(STRING$(2, 0) + CHR$(1) + CHR$(0)) 'ASC(CHR$(1)) * 256 * 256 = 65536
PRINT CVL(STRING$(3, 0) + CHR$(1)) 'ASC(CHR$(1)) * 256 * 256 * 256 = 16777216  


Example 2:

  
FIELD #1, 4 AS N$, 12 AS B$...
GET #1
Y& = CVL(N$)  
Explanation: Reads a field from file #1, and converts the first four bytes (N$) into a long integer value assigned to the variable Y&.
Since the representation of a long number can use up to 10 ASCII characters (ten bytes), writing to a file using MKL$ conversion, and then reading back with the CVL conversion can save up to 6 bytes of storage space.


See also



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