UINT64 Convert to Unsigned 64-bit Integer

Section: Type Conversion Functions

Usage

Converts the argument to an unsigned 64-bit Integer. The syntax for its use is
   y = uint64(x)

where x is an n-dimensional numerical array. Conversion follows saturation rules (e.g., if x is outside the normal range for an unsigned 64-bit integer of [0,2^64-1], it is truncated to that range. Note that both NaN and Inf both map to 0.

Example

The following piece of code demonstrates several uses of uint64.
--> uint64(200)

ans = 
 200 
In the next example, an integer outside the range of the type is passed in. The result is truncated to the maximum value of the data type.
--> uint64(40e9)

ans = 
 40000000000 
In the next example, a negative integer is passed in. The result is zero.
--> uint64(-100)

ans = 
 0 
In the next example, a positive double precision argument is passed in. The result is the unsigned integer that is closest to the argument.
--> uint64(pi)

ans = 
 3 
In the next example, a complex argument is passed in. The result is the complex unsigned integer that is closest to the argument.
--> uint64(5+2*i)

ans = 
   5.0000 +  2.0000i 
In the next example, a string argument is passed in. The string argument is converted into an integer array corresponding to the ASCII values of each character.
--> uint64('helo')

ans = 
 104 101 108 111 
In the last example, a cell-array is passed in. For cell-arrays and structure arrays, the result is an error.
--> uint64({4})
Error: Cannot perform type conversions with this type