Crate astro_float
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Astro-float (astronomically large floating point numbers) is a library that implements arbitrary precision floating point numbers.
Introduction
Numbers
The number is defined by the data type BigFloat
.
Each finite number consists of an array of words representing the mantissa, exponent, and sign.
BigFloat
can also be Inf
(positive infinity), -Inf
(negative infinity) or NaN
(not-a-number).
BigFloat
creation operations take bit precision as an argument.
Precision is always rounded up to the nearest word.
For example, if you specify a precision of 1 bit, then it will be converted to 64 bits when one word has a size of 64 bits.
If you specify a precision of 65 bits, the resulting precision will be 128 bits (2 words), and so on.
Most operations take the rounding mode as an argument. The operation will typically internally result in a number with more precision than necessary. Before the result is returned to the user, the result is rounded according to the rounding mode and reduced to the expected precision.
BigFloat
can be parsed from a string and formatted into a string using binary, octal, decimal, or hexadecimal representation.
Numbers can be subnormal. Usually any number is normalized: the most significant bit of the mantissa is set to 1. If the result of the operation has the smallest possible exponent, then normalization cannot be performed, and some significant bits of the mantissa may become 0. This allows for a more gradual transition to zero.
Error handling
In case of an error, such as memory allocation error, BigFloat
takes the value NaN
.
BigFloat::get_err()
can be used to get the associated error in this situation.
BigFloatNumber
BigFloatNumber
is a data type provided for backward compatibility.
It represents the finite number, i.e. it has mantissa, sign, and exponent, and can’t be Inf
or NaN
.
BigFloat
uses BigFloatNumber
internally. It is advisable to use BigFloat
instead of BigFloatNumber
.
Constants
Constants such as pi or the Euler number have arbitrary precision and are evaluated lazily and then cached in the constants cache. Some functions expect constants cache as parameter because the library does not maintain global state.
Examples
use astro_float::BigFloat;
use astro_float::Consts;
use astro_float::RoundingMode;
// Precision with some space for error.
let p = 1024 + 8;
// Rounding of all operations
let rm = RoundingMode::ToEven;
// Initialize mathematical constants cache
let mut cc = Consts::new().unwrap();
// Compute pi: pi = 6*arctan(1/sqrt(3))
let six = BigFloat::from_word(6, 1);
let three = BigFloat::from_word(3, p);
let n = three.sqrt(p, rm);
let n = n.reciprocal(p, rm);
let n = n.atan(p, rm, &mut cc);
let mut pi = six.mul(&n, p, rm);
// Reduce precision to 1024
pi.set_precision(1024, rm).expect("Precision updated");
// Use library's constant for verifying the result
let pi_lib = cc.pi(1024, rm).unwrap().into();
// Compare computed constant with library's constant
assert_eq!(pi.cmp(&pi_lib), Some(0));
// Print using decimal radix.
println!("{}", pi);
// output: 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097494459230781640628620899862803482534211706798214808651328230664709384460955058223172535940812848111745028410270193852110555964462294895493038196442881097566593344612847564823378678316527120190914564856692346034861045432664821339360726024914127372458699748e+0
no_std
The library can work without the standard library provided there is a memory allocator. The standard library dependency is activated by the feature std
.
The feature std
is active by default and must be excluded when specifying dependency, e.g.:
[dependencies]
astro-float = { version = "0.4.0", default-features = false }