return 1;
}
}
+#elif defined(TARGET_MIPS)
+static int pickNaN(flag aIsQNaN, flag aIsSNaN, flag bIsQNaN, flag bIsSNaN,
+ flag aIsLargerSignificand)
+{
+ /* According to MIPS specifications, if one of the two operands is
+ * a sNaN, a new qNaN has to be generated. This is done in
+ * floatXX_maybe_silence_nan(). For qNaN inputs the specifications
+ * says: "When possible, this QNaN result is one of the operand QNaN
+ * values." In practice it seems that most implementations choose
+ * the first operand if both operands are qNaN. In short this gives
+ * the following rules:
+ * 1. A if it is signaling
+ * 2. B if it is signaling
+ * 3. A (quiet)
+ * 4. B (quiet)
+ * A signaling NaN is always silenced before returning it.
+ */
+ if (aIsSNaN) {
+ return 0;
+ } else if (bIsSNaN) {
+ return 1;
+ } else if (aIsQNaN) {
+ return 0;
+ } else {
+ return 1;
+ }
+}
#else
static int pickNaN(flag aIsQNaN, flag aIsSNaN, flag bIsQNaN, flag bIsSNaN,
flag aIsLargerSignificand)