>>Now you can put an imaginary decimal point everywhere you like, for instance:
>>1=1111 . 0000 b
>>0.5=1000 . 0000 b
>>0.125=0010 . 0000 b
>>Observe that precision of 1 coeficient had reduced, but you gained 4 decimal >>places to represent fractional numbers in the result.
Do you mean that the lost 4 bit can use the multiplicant and adder to compresent it?
Added after 21 seconds:
>>Now you can put an imaginary decimal point everywhere you like, for instance:
>>1=1111 . 0000 b
>>0.5=1000 . 0000 b
>>0.125=0010 . 0000 b
>>Observe that precision of 1 coeficient had reduced, but you gained 4 decimal >>places to represent fractional numbers in the result.
Do you mean that the lost 4 bit can use the multiplicant and adder to compresent it?