Arithmetic Dialect
Refer to the official documentation for more details.
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.addf Method
addf
The addf
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be a floating point scalar type, a vector whose element type is a floating point type, or a floating point tensor.
Example
// Scalar addition.
%a = arith.addf %b, %c : f64
// SIMD vector addition, e.g. for Intel SSE.
%f = arith.addf %g, %h : vector<4xf32>
// Tensor addition.
%x = arith.addf %y, %z : tensor<4x?xbf16>
TODO: In the distant future, this will accept optional attributes for fast math, contraction, rounding mode, and other controls.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.addi Method
addi
Performs N-bit addition on the operands. The operands are interpreted as unsigned bitvectors. The result is represented by a bitvector containing the mathematical value of the addition modulo 2^n, where n
is the bitwidth. Because arith
integers use a two's complement representation, this operation is applicable on both signed and unsigned integer operands.
The addi
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers.
This op supports nuw
/nsw
overflow flags which stands stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap", respectively. If the nuw
and/or nsw
flags are present, and an unsigned/signed overflow occurs (respectively), the result is poison.
Example
// Scalar addition.
%a = arith.addi %b, %c : i64
// Scalar addition with overflow flags.
%a = arith.addi %b, %c overflow<nsw, nuw> : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise addition.
%f = arith.addi %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise addition.
%x = arith.addi %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.addui_extended Method
addui_extended
Performs (N+1)-bit addition on zero-extended operands. Returns two results: the N-bit sum (same type as both operands), and the overflow bit (boolean-like), where 1
indicates unsigned addition overflow, while 0
indicates no overflow.
Example
// Scalar addition.
%sum, %overflow = arith.addui_extended %b, %c : i64, i1
// Vector element-wise addition.
%d:2 = arith.addui_extended %e, %f : vector<4xi32>, vector<4xi1>
// Tensor element-wise addition.
%x:2 = arith.addui_extended %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>, tensor<4x?xi1>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.andi Method
andi
The andi
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers. It has no standard attributes.
Example
// Scalar integer bitwise and.
%a = arith.andi %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise bitwise integer and.
%f = arith.andi %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise bitwise integer and.
%x = arith.andi %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.bitcast Method
bitcast
Bitcast an integer or floating point value to an integer or floating point value of equal bit width. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
Note that this implements a logical bitcast independent of target endianness. This allows constant folding without target information and is consitent with the bitcast constant folders in LLVM (see https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/18c19414eb/llvm/lib/IR/ConstantFold.cpp#L168) For targets where the source and target type have the same endianness (which is the standard), this cast will also change no bits at runtime, but it may still require an operation, for example if the machine has different floating point and integer register files. For targets that have a different endianness for the source and target types (e.g. float is big-endian and integer is little-endian) a proper lowering would add operations to swap the order of words in addition to the bitcast.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.ceildivsi Method
ceildivsi
Signed integer division. Rounds towards positive infinity, i.e. 7 / -2 = -3
.
Divison by zero, or signed division overflow (minimum value divided by -1) is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any of its elements are divided by zero or has a signed division overflow.
Example
// Scalar signed integer division.
%a = arith.ceildivsi %b, %c : i64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.ceildivui Method
ceildivui
Unsigned integer division. Rounds towards positive infinity. Treats the leading bit as the most significant, i.e. for i16
given two's complement representation, 6 / -2 = 6 / (2^16 - 2) = 1
.
Division by zero is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any elements are divided by zero.
Example
// Scalar unsigned integer division.
%a = arith.ceildivui %b, %c : i64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.cmpf Method
cmpf
The cmpf
operation compares its two operands according to the float comparison rules and the predicate specified by the respective attribute. The predicate defines the type of comparison: (un)orderedness, (in)equality and signed less/greater than (or equal to) as well as predicates that are always true or false. The operands must have the same type, and this type must be a float type, or a vector or tensor thereof. The result is an i1, or a vector/tensor thereof having the same shape as the inputs. Unlike cmpi, the operands are always treated as signed. The u prefix indicates unordered comparison, not unsigned comparison, so "une" means unordered or not equal. For the sake of readability by humans, custom assembly form for the operation uses a string-typed attribute for the predicate. The value of this attribute corresponds to lower-cased name of the predicate constant, e.g., "one" means "ordered not equal". The string representation of the attribute is merely a syntactic sugar and is converted to an integer attribute by the parser.
Example
%r1 = arith.cmpf oeq, %0, %1 : f32
%r2 = arith.cmpf ult, %0, %1 : tensor<42x42xf64>
%r3 = "arith.cmpf"(%0, %1) {predicate: 0} : (f8, f8) -> i1
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.cmpi Method
cmpi
The cmpi
operation is a generic comparison for integer-like types. Its two arguments can be integers, vectors or tensors thereof as long as their types match. The operation produces an i1 for the former case, a vector or a tensor of i1 with the same shape as inputs in the other cases.
Its first argument is an attribute that defines which type of comparison is performed. The following comparisons are supported:
equal (mnemonic:
"eq"
; integer value:0
)not equal (mnemonic:
"ne"
; integer value:1
)signed less than (mnemonic:
"slt"
; integer value:2
)signed less than or equal (mnemonic:
"sle"
; integer value:3
)signed greater than (mnemonic:
"sgt"
; integer value:4
)signed greater than or equal (mnemonic:
"sge"
; integer value:5
)unsigned less than (mnemonic:
"ult"
; integer value:6
)unsigned less than or equal (mnemonic:
"ule"
; integer value:7
)unsigned greater than (mnemonic:
"ugt"
; integer value:8
)unsigned greater than or equal (mnemonic:
"uge"
; integer value:9
)
The result is 1
if the comparison is true and 0
otherwise. For vector or tensor operands, the comparison is performed elementwise and the element of the result indicates whether the comparison is true for the operand elements with the same indices as those of the result.
Note: while the custom assembly form uses strings, the actual underlying attribute has integer type (or rather enum class in C++ code) as seen from the generic assembly form. String literals are used to improve readability of the IR by humans.
This operation only applies to integer-like operands, but not floats. The main reason being that comparison operations have diverging sets of attributes: integers require sign specification while floats require various floating point-related particularities, e.g., -ffast-math
behavior, IEEE754 compliance, etc (rationale). The type of comparison is specified as attribute to avoid introducing ten similar operations, taking into account that they are often implemented using the same operation downstream (rationale). The separation between signed and unsigned order comparisons is necessary because of integers being signless. The comparison operation must know how to interpret values with the foremost bit being set: negatives in two's complement or large positives (rationale).
Example
// Custom form of scalar "signed less than" comparison.
%x = arith.cmpi slt, %lhs, %rhs : i32
// Generic form of the same operation.
%x = "arith.cmpi"(%lhs, %rhs) {predicate = 2 : i64} : (i32, i32) -> i1
// Custom form of vector equality comparison.
%x = arith.cmpi eq, %lhs, %rhs : vector<4xi64>
// Generic form of the same operation.
%x = "arith.cmpi"(%lhs, %rhs) {predicate = 0 : i64}
: (vector<4xi64>, vector<4xi64>) -> vector<4xi1>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.constant Method
constant
The constant
operation produces an SSA value equal to some integer or floating-point constant specified by an attribute. This is the way MLIR forms simple integer and floating point constants.
Example
// Integer constant
%1 = arith.constant 42 : i32
// Equivalent generic form
%1 = "arith.constant"() {value = 42 : i32} : () -> i32
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.divsi Method
divsi
Signed integer division. Rounds towards zero. Treats the leading bit as sign, i.e. 6 / -2 = -3
.
Divison by zero, or signed division overflow (minimum value divided by -1) is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any of its elements are divided by zero or has a signed division overflow.
Example
// Scalar signed integer division.
%a = arith.divsi %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise division.
%f = arith.divsi %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise integer division.
%x = arith.divsi %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.divui Method
divui
Unsigned integer division. Rounds towards zero. Treats the leading bit as the most significant, i.e. for i16
given two's complement representation, 6 / -2 = 6 / (2^16 - 2) = 0
.
Division by zero is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any elements are divided by zero.
Example
// Scalar unsigned integer division.
%a = arith.divui %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise division.
%f = arith.divui %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise integer division.
%x = arith.divui %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.extf Method
extf
Cast a floating-point value to a larger floating-point-typed value. The destination type must to be strictly wider than the source type. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.extsi Method
extsi
The integer sign extension operation takes an integer input of width M and an integer destination type of width N. The destination bit-width must be larger than the input bit-width (N > M). The top-most (N - M) bits of the output are filled with copies of the most-significant bit of the input.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 5 : i3 // %1 is 0b101
%2 = arith.extsi %1 : i3 to i6 // %2 is 0b111101
%3 = arith.constant 2 : i3 // %3 is 0b010
%4 = arith.extsi %3 : i3 to i6 // %4 is 0b000010
%5 = arith.extsi %0 : vector<2 x i32> to vector<2 x i64>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.extui Method
extui
The integer zero extension operation takes an integer input of width M and an integer destination type of width N. The destination bit-width must be larger than the input bit-width (N > M). The top-most (N - M) bits of the output are filled with zeros.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 5 : i3 // %1 is 0b101
%2 = arith.extui %1 : i3 to i6 // %2 is 0b000101
%3 = arith.constant 2 : i3 // %3 is 0b010
%4 = arith.extui %3 : i3 to i6 // %4 is 0b000010
%5 = arith.extui %0 : vector<2 x i32> to vector<2 x i64>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.floordivsi Method
floordivsi
Signed integer division. Rounds towards negative infinity, i.e. 5 / -2 = -3
.
Divison by zero, or signed division overflow (minimum value divided by -1) is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any of its elements are divided by zero or has a signed division overflow.
Example
// Scalar signed integer division.
%a = arith.floordivsi %b, %c : i64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.fptosi Method
fptosi
Cast from a value interpreted as floating-point to the nearest (rounding towards zero) signed integer value. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.fptoui Method
fptoui
Cast from a value interpreted as floating-point to the nearest (rounding towards zero) unsigned integer value. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.index_cast Method
index_cast
Casts between scalar or vector integers and corresponding 'index' scalar or vectors. Index is an integer of platform-specific bit width. If casting to a wider integer, the value is sign-extended. If casting to a narrower integer, the value is truncated.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.index_castui Method
index_castui
Casts between scalar or vector integers and corresponding 'index' scalar or vectors. Index is an integer of platform-specific bit width. If casting to a wider integer, the value is zero-extended. If casting to a narrower integer, the value is truncated.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.maximumf Method
maximumf
Returns the maximum of the two arguments, treating -0.0 as less than +0.0. If one of the arguments is NaN, then the result is also NaN.
Example
// Scalar floating-point maximum.
%a = arith.maximumf %b, %c : f64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.maxnumf Method
maxnumf
Returns the maximum of the two arguments. If the arguments are -0.0 and +0.0, then the result is either of them. If one of the arguments is NaN, then the result is the other argument.
Example
// Scalar floating-point maximum.
%a = arith.maxnumf %b, %c : f64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.minimumf Method
minimumf
Returns the minimum of the two arguments, treating -0.0 as less than +0.0. If one of the arguments is NaN, then the result is also NaN.
Example
// Scalar floating-point minimum.
%a = arith.minimumf %b, %c : f64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.minnumf Method
minnumf
Returns the minimum of the two arguments. If the arguments are -0.0 and +0.0, then the result is either of them. If one of the arguments is NaN, then the result is the other argument.
Example
// Scalar floating-point minimum.
%a = arith.minnumf %b, %c : f64
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.mulf Method
mulf
The mulf
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be a floating point scalar type, a vector whose element type is a floating point type, or a floating point tensor.
Example
// Scalar multiplication.
%a = arith.mulf %b, %c : f64
// SIMD pointwise vector multiplication, e.g. for Intel SSE.
%f = arith.mulf %g, %h : vector<4xf32>
// Tensor pointwise multiplication.
%x = arith.mulf %y, %z : tensor<4x?xbf16>
TODO: In the distant future, this will accept optional attributes for fast math, contraction, rounding mode, and other controls.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.muli Method
muli
Performs N-bit multiplication on the operands. The operands are interpreted as unsigned bitvectors. The result is represented by a bitvector containing the mathematical value of the multiplication modulo 2^n, where n
is the bitwidth. Because arith
integers use a two's complement representation, this operation is applicable on both signed and unsigned integer operands.
The muli
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers.
This op supports nuw
/nsw
overflow flags which stands stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap", respectively. If the nuw
and/or nsw
flags are present, and an unsigned/signed overflow occurs (respectively), the result is poison.
Example
// Scalar multiplication.
%a = arith.muli %b, %c : i64
// Scalar multiplication with overflow flags.
%a = arith.muli %b, %c overflow<nsw, nuw> : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise multiplication.
%f = arith.muli %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise multiplication.
%x = arith.muli %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.mulsi_extended Method
mulsi_extended
Performs (2*N)-bit multiplication on sign-extended operands. Returns two N-bit results: the low and the high halves of the product. The low half has the same value as the result of regular multiplication arith.muli
with the same operands.
Example
// Scalar multiplication.
%low, %high = arith.mulsi_extended %a, %b : i32
// Vector element-wise multiplication.
%c:2 = arith.mulsi_extended %d, %e : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise multiplication.
%x:2 = arith.mulsi_extended %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.mului_extended Method
mului_extended
Performs (2*N)-bit multiplication on zero-extended operands. Returns two N-bit results: the low and the high halves of the product. The low half has the same value as the result of regular multiplication arith.muli
with the same operands.
Example
// Scalar multiplication.
%low, %high = arith.mului_extended %a, %b : i32
// Vector element-wise multiplication.
%c:2 = arith.mului_extended %d, %e : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise multiplication.
%x:2 = arith.mului_extended %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.negf Method
negf
The negf
operation computes the negation of a given value. It takes one operand and returns one result of the same type. This type may be a float scalar type, a vector whose element type is float, or a tensor of floats. It has no standard attributes.
Example
// Scalar negation value.
%a = arith.negf %b : f64
// SIMD vector element-wise negation value.
%f = arith.negf %g : vector<4xf32>
// Tensor element-wise negation value.
%x = arith.negf %y : tensor<4x?xf8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.ori Method
ori
The ori
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers. It has no standard attributes.
Example
// Scalar integer bitwise or.
%a = arith.ori %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise bitwise integer or.
%f = arith.ori %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise bitwise integer or.
%x = arith.ori %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.remf Method
remf
Returns the floating point division remainder. The remainder has the same sign as the dividend (lhs operand).
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.remsi Method
remsi
Signed integer division remainder. Treats the leading bit as sign, i.e. 6 % -2 = 0
.
Division by zero is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any elements are divided by zero.
Example
// Scalar signed integer division remainder.
%a = arith.remsi %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise division remainder.
%f = arith.remsi %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise integer division remainder.
%x = arith.remsi %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.remui Method
remui
Unsigned integer division remainder. Treats the leading bit as the most significant, i.e. for i16
, 6 % -2 = 6 % (2^16 - 2) = 6
.
Division by zero is undefined behavior. When applied to vector
and tensor
values, the behavior is undefined if any elements are divided by zero.
Example
// Scalar unsigned integer division remainder.
%a = arith.remui %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise division remainder.
%f = arith.remui %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise integer division remainder.
%x = arith.remui %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.select Method
select
The arith.select
operation chooses one value based on a binary condition supplied as its first operand.
If the value of the first operand (the condition) is 1
, then the second operand is returned, and the third operand is ignored, even if it was poison.
If the value of the first operand (the condition) is 0
, then the third operand is returned, and the second operand is ignored, even if it was poison.
If the value of the first operand (the condition) is poison, then the operation returns poison.
The operation applies to vectors and tensors elementwise given the shape of all operands is identical. The choice is made for each element individually based on the value at the same position as the element in the condition operand. If an i1 is provided as the condition, the entire vector or tensor is chosen.
Example
// Custom form of scalar selection.
%x = arith.select %cond, %true, %false : i32
// Generic form of the same operation.
%x = "arith.select"(%cond, %true, %false) : (i1, i32, i32) -> i32
// Element-wise vector selection.
%vx = arith.select %vcond, %vtrue, %vfalse : vector<42xi1>, vector<42xf32>
// Full vector selection.
%vx = arith.select %cond, %vtrue, %vfalse : vector<42xf32>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.shli Method
shli
The shli
operation shifts the integer value of the first operand to the left by the integer value of the second operand. The second operand is interpreted as unsigned. The low order bits are filled with zeros. If the value of the second operand is greater or equal than the bitwidth of the first operand, then the operation returns poison.
This op supports nuw
/nsw
overflow flags which stands stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap", respectively. If the nuw
and/or nsw
flags are present, and an unsigned/signed overflow occurs (respectively), the result is poison.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 5 : i8 // %1 is 0b00000101
%2 = arith.constant 3 : i8
%3 = arith.shli %1, %2 : i8 // %3 is 0b00101000
%4 = arith.shli %1, %2 overflow<nsw, nuw> : i8
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.shrsi Method
shrsi
The shrsi
operation shifts an integer value of the first operand to the right by the value of the second operand. The first operand is interpreted as signed, and the second operand is interpreter as unsigned. The high order bits in the output are filled with copies of the most-significant bit of the shifted value (which means that the sign of the value is preserved). If the value of the second operand is greater or equal than bitwidth of the first operand, then the operation returns poison.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 160 : i8 // %1 is 0b10100000
%2 = arith.constant 3 : i8
%3 = arith.shrsi %1, %2 : (i8, i8) -> i8 // %3 is 0b11110100
%4 = arith.constant 96 : i8 // %4 is 0b01100000
%5 = arith.shrsi %4, %2 : (i8, i8) -> i8 // %5 is 0b00001100
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.shrui Method
shrui
The shrui
operation shifts an integer value of the first operand to the right by the value of the second operand. The first operand is interpreted as unsigned, and the second operand is interpreted as unsigned. The high order bits are always filled with zeros. If the value of the second operand is greater or equal than the bitwidth of the first operand, then the operation returns poison.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 160 : i8 // %1 is 0b10100000
%2 = arith.constant 3 : i8
%3 = arith.shrui %1, %2 : (i8, i8) -> i8 // %3 is 0b00010100
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.sitofp Method
sitofp
Cast from a value interpreted as a signed integer to the corresponding floating-point value. If the value cannot be exactly represented, it is rounded using the default rounding mode. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.subf Method
subf
The subf
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be a floating point scalar type, a vector whose element type is a floating point type, or a floating point tensor.
Example
// Scalar subtraction.
%a = arith.subf %b, %c : f64
// SIMD vector subtraction, e.g. for Intel SSE.
%f = arith.subf %g, %h : vector<4xf32>
// Tensor subtraction.
%x = arith.subf %y, %z : tensor<4x?xbf16>
TODO: In the distant future, this will accept optional attributes for fast math, contraction, rounding mode, and other controls.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.subi Method
subi
Performs N-bit subtraction on the operands. The operands are interpreted as unsigned bitvectors. The result is represented by a bitvector containing the mathematical value of the subtraction modulo 2^n, where n
is the bitwidth. Because arith
integers use a two's complement representation, this operation is applicable on both signed and unsigned integer operands.
The subi
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers.
This op supports nuw
/nsw
overflow flags which stands stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap", respectively. If the nuw
and/or nsw
flags are present, and an unsigned/signed overflow occurs (respectively), the result is poison.
Example
// Scalar subtraction.
%a = arith.subi %b, %c : i64
// Scalar subtraction with overflow flags.
%a = arith.subi %b, %c overflow<nsw, nuw> : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise subtraction.
%f = arith.subi %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise subtraction.
%x = arith.subi %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.truncf Method
truncf
Truncate a floating-point value to a smaller floating-point-typed value. The destination type must be strictly narrower than the source type. If the value cannot be exactly represented, it is rounded using the provided rounding mode or the default one if no rounding mode is provided. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.trunci Method
trunci
The integer truncation operation takes an integer input of width M and an integer destination type of width N. The destination bit-width must be smaller than the input bit-width (N < M). The top-most (N - M) bits of the input are discarded.
Example
%1 = arith.constant 21 : i5 // %1 is 0b10101
%2 = arith.trunci %1 : i5 to i4 // %2 is 0b0101
%3 = arith.trunci %1 : i5 to i3 // %3 is 0b101
%5 = arith.trunci %0 : vector<2 x i32> to vector<2 x i16>
Reactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.uitofp Method
uitofp
Cast from a value interpreted as unsigned integer to the corresponding floating-point value. If the value cannot be exactly represented, it is rounded using the default rounding mode. When operating on vectors, casts elementwise.
sourceReactant.MLIR.Dialects.arith.xori Method
xori
The xori
operation takes two operands and returns one result, each of these is required to be the same type. This type may be an integer scalar type, a vector whose element type is integer, or a tensor of integers. It has no standard attributes.
Example
// Scalar integer bitwise xor.
%a = arith.xori %b, %c : i64
// SIMD vector element-wise bitwise integer xor.
%f = arith.xori %g, %h : vector<4xi32>
// Tensor element-wise bitwise integer xor.
%x = arith.xori %y, %z : tensor<4x?xi8>