Why do MIPS operations on unsigned numbers give signed results?

我的未来我决定 提交于 2019-11-30 08:49:50

From Wikipedia:

The MIPS32 Instruction Set states that the word unsigned as part of Add and Subtract instructions, is a misnomer. The difference between signed and unsigned versions of commands is not a sign extension (or lack thereof) of the operands, but controls whether a trap is executed on overflow (e.g. Add) or an overflow is ignored (Add unsigned). An immediate operand CONST to these instructions is always sign-extended.

From the MIPS Instruction Reference:

ALL arithmetic immediate values are sign-extended [...] The only difference between signed and unsigned instructions is that signed instructions can generate an overflow exception and unsigned instructions can not.

It looks to me like the real problem is the syscall that you are using to print numbers. It appears to and to always interpret what you pass as signed, and to possibly to bound as as well.

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