Jul 4, 2016 #1 A Anwesa Roy Member level 2 Joined Feb 24, 2014 Messages 49 Helped 0 Reputation 0 Reaction score 0 Trophy points 6 Activity points 532 We are writing a code in vhdl code. yr22 and yi22 are signals. We are not getting what -1.#IND means.
We are writing a code in vhdl code. yr22 and yi22 are signals. We are not getting what -1.#IND means.
Jul 4, 2016 #2 S shaiko Advanced Member level 5 Joined Aug 20, 2011 Messages 2,644 Helped 303 Reputation 608 Reaction score 297 Trophy points 1,363 Activity points 18,302 I think #IND means indeterminate. What simulator are you using?
Jul 4, 2016 #3 A Anwesa Roy Member level 2 Joined Feb 24, 2014 Messages 49 Helped 0 Reputation 0 Reaction score 0 Trophy points 6 Activity points 532 shaiko said: I think #IND means indeterminate. What simulator are you using? Click to expand... vivado....but we are geting the same thing in ISM simulator.
shaiko said: I think #IND means indeterminate. What simulator are you using? Click to expand... vivado....but we are geting the same thing in ISM simulator.
Jul 4, 2016 #4 S std_match Advanced Member level 4 Joined Jul 9, 2010 Messages 1,304 Helped 463 Reputation 926 Reaction score 448 Trophy points 1,363 Location Sweden Activity points 10,169 It is the result of an illegal floating point operation such as divide by zero, square root of a negative number, or similar. The code that gets this value is not synthesizeable.
It is the result of an illegal floating point operation such as divide by zero, square root of a negative number, or similar. The code that gets this value is not synthesizeable.