On Thu, 2 Mar 2023 16:23:14 +0200 Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Mar 02, 2023 at 08:49:22AM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote: > > On 01-03-2023 16:30, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > > > On Tue, Feb 28, 2023 at 07:31:51AM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote: > > ... > > > > > + /* Shift result to compensate for bit resolution vs. sample rate */ > > > > + value <<= 16 - ads1100_data_bits(data); > > > > + *val = sign_extend32(value, 15); > > > Why not simply > > > > > > *val = sign_extend32(value, ads1100_data_bits(data) - 1); > > > > > > ? > > > > As discussed with Jonathan Cameron, the register is right-justified and the > > number of bits depend on the data rate. Rather than having the "scale" > > change when the sample rate changes, we chose to adjust the sample result so > > it's always left-justified. > > Hmm... OK, but it adds unneeded code I think. There isn't a way to do it in one go that I can think of. The first statement is multiplying the value by a power of 2, not just sign extending it. You could sign extend first then shift to do the multiply, but ends up same amount of code. It does look a bit like a weird open coded sign extension though so I can see where the confusion came from! > > ... > > > > > + for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) { > > > > + if (BIT(i) == gain) { > > > ffs()/__ffs() (look at the documentation for the difference and use proper one). > > > > Thought of it, but I'd rather have it return EINVAL for attempting to set > > the analog gain to "7" (0nly 1,2,4,8 allowed). > > I'm not sure what you are implying. > > You have open coded something that has already to be a function which on some > architectures become a single assembly instruction. > > That said, drop your for-loop if-cond and use one of the proposed directly. > Then you may compare the result to what ever you want to be a limit and return > whatever error code you want to Agreed, could do it with appropriate ffs() followed by if (BIT(i) != gain) return -EINVAL;