VEC_$ISUB_VECTOR Domain/OS VEC_$ISUB_VECTOR
NAME
vec_$isub_vector - subtract two 32-bit integer vectors
SYNOPSIS (C)
#include <apollo/base.h>
#include <apollo/vec.h>
void vec_$isub_vector(
long int *start_vec,
long int *sub_vec,
long int &length,
long int *result_vec)
SYNOPSIS (Pascal)
%include '/sys/ins/base.ins.pas';
%include '/sys/ins/vec.ins.pas';
procedure vec_$isub_vector(
in start_vec: univ vec_$integer32_vector;
in sub_vec: univ vec_$integer32_vector;
in length: integer32;
out result_vec: univ vec_$integer32_vector);
SYNOPSIS (FORTRAN)
%include '/sys/ins/base.ins.ftn'
%include '/sys/ins/vec.ins.ftn'
parameter (nvec = 10)
integer*4 start_vec(nvec), result_vec(nvec), sub_vec(nvec)
integer*4 length
call vec_$isub_vector(start_vec, sub_vec, length, result_vec)
DESCRIPTION
Vec_$isub_vector subtracts the vector sub_vec from start_vec and stores
the final result in result_vec. It differs from vec_$sub_vector in that
the arguments are 32-bit integer. The calculation performed is as fol-
lows:
For each integer I such that 1 <= I <= length,
result_vec(I) = start_vec(I) - sub_vec(I)
start_vec
A vector to be subtracted from.
sub_vec
A vector to be subtracted.
length
The number of elements to be operated on; normally the same as the
number of elements in the vectors.
result_vec
The vector created by subtracting sub_vec from start_vec.
NOTES
When vec_$isub_vector is used to operate on matrixes in C and Pascal,
start_vec, sub_vec, and result_vec are row vectors; in FORTRAN, they are
column vectors.
As in all the vec_$ calls, the result array must not overlap any of the
input arrays; the result array may be identical to an input, but must not
contain any subset of it. Because of pipelining, using overlapping
input and output arrays may cause incorrect results.
SEE ALSO
vec_$add_vector, vec_$mult_vector, vec_$sub_vector_i, vec_$sub_vector,
vec_$dsub_vector_i, vec_$dsub_vector, vec_$isub_vector_i,
vec_$isub_vector16, vec_$isub_vector16_i.