Mitsubishi Electronics garage door opener FX3UC Manual

PDF Manuals
964 Pages English

Mitsubishi Electronics garage door opener FX3UC
Pages
OF
964
153
FX3S/FX3G/FX3GC/FX3U/FX3UC Series
Programming Manual - Basic & Applied Instruction Edition
5 How to Specify Devices and Constants to Instructions
5.1 Numeric Values Handled in PLC (Octal, Decimal, Hexadecimal and Real Numbers)
1
Introduction
2
Overview
3
Instruction
List
4
Devices
in Detail
5
Specified the
Device &
Constant
6
Before
Programming
7
Basic
Instruction
8
FNC00-FNC09
Program Flow
9
FNC10-FNC19
Move & Compare
10
FNC20-FNC29
Arith. & Logic
Operation
5. How to Specify Devices and Constants to Instructions
This chapter explains how to specify sources and destinations in sequence instructions which are the basis for
handling PLC instructions.
Specifying constants as decimal, hexadecimal and real numbers
Specifying digits of bit devices
Specifying bit positions in data registers
Directly specifying BFM (buffer memory) in special function units/blocks
Indexing with index registers
5.1 Numeric Values Handled in PLC
(Octal, Decimal, Hexadecimal and Real Numbers)
FX PLCs handle five types of numeric values according to the application and purpose.
This section explains the roles and functions of these numeric values.
5.1.1 Types of numeric values
1. Decimal numbers (DEC)
Set value (constant K) of timers and counters
Device numbers of auxiliary relays (M), timers (T), counters (C), state relays (S), etc.
Numeric values in operands and instruction operations in applied instructions (constant K)
2. Hexadecimal numbers (HEX)
Numeric values in operands and instruction operations in applied instructions (constant H)
3. Binary numbers (BIN)
For a timer, counter or data register, a numeric value is specified in
decimal or hexadecimal as described above. But all of these numeric
values are handled in binary format inside PLCs.
When these devices are monitored in peripheral equipment, they are
automatically converted into the decimal format as shown in the figure
on the right (or can be converted into the hexadecimal format).
Handling of negative value
A negative value is expressed in complement of PLCs.
For details, refer to the explanation of NEG (FNC 29)
instruction.
4. Octal numbers (OCT)
In FX PLCs, device numbers of input relays and output relays are
assigned in octal.
Because "8" and "9" do not exist in octal, device numbers are carried in the way "0 to 7, 10 to 17, 70 to 77, 100 to
107".
5. Binary coded decimal (BCD)
BCD format expresses each numeric value from 0 to 9 constructing each digit of a decimal number in a 4-bit binary
number.
Because handling of each digit is easy, this format is adopted in controlling digital switches of BCD output type and
seven-segment display units.
6. Real numbers (floating point data)
FX3S, FX3G, FX3GC, FX3U and FX3UC PLCs have the floating point operation function to achieve high accuracy
operation.
In floating point operations, binary floating points (real numbers) are used, and scientific notation (real numbers) are
used for monitoring them.
1010100011000000
1
2
4
8
16
32
64
128
256
512
1024
2048
4096
8192
16384
(binary)
Input from
keyboard
0: Positive value
1: Negative value
(decimal)
(decimal)
K 7 8 9
Monitoring in programming tool
Automatic
conversion
1+4+16+256+512
= 789
Example of decimal
number input
K 7 8 9
Table of Contents
Expand All
Related Manuals for Mitsubishi Electronics garage door opener FX3UC