The exponent can be both shifting to the left and right of the decimal place. 127 is the pivot point. Any number larger than 127 shifts to the right. Any number less than 127 shifts to the left. In the above example you count the number of places you had to move the decimal to place it to the right of the left-most 1. Add that to 127 and store that number. When converting it back you will take 127 and subtract it from the exponent and find the positive #6 which tells you to shift the decimal place to the right 6 places. If it was a negative number, you would shift it to the left.
Would you mind explaining why we need to substract to 128? Could you please share an example of a number is larger than 127? I am not understanding the shifting to the right correctly. Thanks!
it concerns me how many people online know how to explain things better than my lecturers
this is an fsu professor
Why did you write the 127 there? In the line when calculating the exponent
I watched your lecture video from Turkey, dear teacher, thank you. Thank you for teaching it in a short and clear way.
Thanks! Helped me a lot when my teacher was not making any sense.
Glad I could help.
But those numbers in boxes l can't see them
The caligraphy pen is the cherry on top fr, what a pro. Thank you!
The exponent can be both shifting to the left and right of the decimal place. 127 is the pivot point. Any number larger than 127 shifts to the right. Any number less than 127 shifts to the left. In the above example you count the number of places you had to move the decimal to place it to the right of the left-most 1. Add that to 127 and store that number. When converting it back you will take 127 and subtract it from the exponent and find the positive #6 which tells you to shift the decimal place to the right 6 places. If it was a negative number, you would shift it to the left.
Would you mind explaining why we need to substract to 128? Could you please share an example of a number is larger than 127? I am not understanding the shifting to the right correctly. Thanks!
Thank you David
Thx a lot. Was more helpful than 1,5h of teacher's shit talk.
how do i Convert (263.3)10 to IEEE754 floating point format in hexadecimal format?
Thank you so much sir I was looking how to convert from IEEE754 so badly and your tutorial saved me😊😊😊
A great way of teaching. Nice Explanation man.
Thank you Very much Sir!
thank you for this video
This is so much better then my teachers way to do it tyty
Thanks, made it look like a piece of cake!
you da goat my nigga
Thank you. Made it much more clearer compared to my teacher
Nice video bro
Thanks man, great explanation !
Thanks =)
Thank you !
i still don’t get it at all
watch the vid
This is among the simplest explanation of how to convert decimal into IEEE 754, thank you 😁