gt: Wasm text instruction

The gt instruction, short for greater than, checks if a floating point number is greater than another floating point number.

Integer types have separate greater than signed (gt_s) and unsigned (gt_u) instructions.

Try it

(module
  (import "env" "log_bool" (func $log_bool (param i32)))
  (func $main
    ;; load 10 and 2 onto the stack
    i32.const 10
    i32.const 2

    i32.gt ;; check if 10 is greater than 2
    call $log_bool ;; log the result
  )
  (start $main)
)
const url = "{%wasm-url%}";

function log_bool(value) {
  console.log(Boolean(value));
  // Expected output: true
}

await WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming(fetch(url), {
  env: { log_bool },
});

Syntax

value_type.gt
value_type

The type of value the instruction is being run on. The following types support gt:

  • f32
  • f64
  • v128 interpretations:
    • f32x4
    • f64x2
gt

The gt instruction. Must always be included after the value_type and a period (.).

Type

[input1, input2] -> [output]
input1

The first input value.

input2

The second input value.

output

The output value, which will be an integer type.

For a non-SIMD gt, the inputs will be basic numeric values such as 3.0 or 3.5. If the first input is greater than the second input, 1 will be pushed on to the stack as an output, otherwise 0 will be pushed on to the stack.

For a SIMD gt, the inputs will be v128 value interpretations, for example f32x4 2.0 30 86.9 120. Each lane of the output pushed to the stack is a 1 or 0 indicating whether the corresponding lane of the first input value is greater than the corresponding lane of the second input value.

Binary encoding

Instruction Binary format Example text => binary
f32.gt 0x5e f32.gt => 0x5e
f64.gt 0x64 f64.gt => 0x64
f32x4.gt 0xfd 68:u32 f32x4.gt => 0xfd 0x44
f64x2.gt 0xfd 74:u32 f64x2.gt => 0xfd 0x4a

Examples

SIMD gt example

In this example, we demonstrate using gt to test whether one SIMD lane value is greater than the same lane value in another SIMD value.

JavaScript

In our script, we grab a reference to a <p> element that we will output our result to, then define an object for import into Wasm containing a single function that writes a value to the output <p>. We then compile and instantiate our Wasm module using the WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming() method, importing the object in the process.

js
const outputElem = document.querySelector("p");

const obj = {
  output(val) {
    outputElem.textContent += val;
  },
};

WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming(fetch("{%wasm-url%}"), {
  obj,
});

Wasm

In our Wasm module, we first import the JavaScript output() function, making sure to declare that it has an i32 parameter. We then declare two SIMD f32x4 values, then check whether the first one's lane values are greater than the second using f32x4.gt. Finally we extract the value stored in lane 3 of the output value using the extract_lane instruction, and output it to the DOM by calling the imported output() function.

wat
(module
  ;; Import output function
  (import "obj" "output" (func $output (param i32)))

  (func $main
    ;; load two SIMD values onto the stack
    v128.const f32x4 20 12 15 102
    v128.const f32x4 20 12 15 100

    ;; check whether the first value is greater than the second
    f32x4.gt
    i32x4.extract_lane 3 ;; Extract a value from the result

    call $output
  )

  (start $main)
)

Result

The output is as follows:

The result is 1 because the value stored in lane 3 of the first input value is greater than the value stored in lane 3 of the second input value.

See also