Expand description
Fixed-point numbers
Alpha: This is an alpha release of the new major version 2.0.0 that makes
use of const generics instead of the typenum
crate. This version requires the nightly
compiler with the generic_const_exprs feature enabled. The stable version
2.0.0 itself will not be released before the generic_const_exprs feature is
stabilized. See the documentation for porting from version 1 to version 2.
The fixed crate provides fixed-point numbers.
FixedI8andFixedU8are eight-bit fixed-point numbers.FixedI16andFixedU16are 16-bit fixed-point numbers.FixedI32andFixedU32are 32-bit fixed-point numbers.FixedI64andFixedU64are 64-bit fixed-point numbers.FixedI128andFixedU128are 128-bit fixed-point numbers.
An n-bit fixed-point number has f = FRAC fractional
bits, and n − f integer bits. For example,
FixedI32<24> is a 32-bit signed fixed-point number with
n = 32 total bits, f = 24 fractional bits, and
n − f = 8 integer bits.
FixedI32<0> behaves like i32, and
FixedU32<0> behaves like u32.
The difference between any two successive representable numbers is constant
throughout the possible range for a fixed-point number:
Δ = 1/2f. When f = 0, like
in FixedI32<0>, Δ = 1 because representable
numbers are integers, and the difference between two successive integers is 1.
When f = n, Δ = 1/2n
and the value lies in the range −0.5 ≤ x < 0.5
for signed numbers like FixedI32<32>, and in the range
0 ≤ x < 1 for unsigned numbers like
FixedU32<32>.
The main features are
- Representation of binary fixed-point numbers up to 128 bits wide.
- Conversions between fixed-point numbers and numeric primitives.
- Comparisons between fixed-point numbers and numeric primitives.
- Parsing from strings in decimal, binary, octal and hexadecimal.
- Display as decimal, binary, octal and hexadecimal.
- Arithmetic and logic operations.
This crate does not provide decimal fixed-point numbers. For example 0.001 cannot be represented exactly, as it is 1/103. It is binary fractions like 1/24 (0.0625) that can be represented exactly, provided there are enough fractional bits.
This crate does not provide general analytic functions.
- No algebraic functions are provided, for example no
sqrtorpow. - No trigonometric functions are provided, for example no
sinorcos. - No other transcendental functions are provided, for example no
logorexp.
These functions are not provided because different implementations can have different trade-offs, for example trading some correctness for speed. Implementations can be provided in other crates.
- The fixed-sqrt crate provides the square root operation.
- The cordic crate provides various functions implemented using the CORDIC algorithm.
The conversions supported cover the following cases.
- Infallible lossless conversions between fixed-point numbers and numeric
primitives are provided using
FromandInto. These never fail (infallible) and do not lose any bits (lossless). - Infallible lossy conversions between fixed-point numbers and numeric
primitives are provided using the
LossyFromandLossyIntotraits. The source can have more fractional bits than the destination. - Checked lossless conversions between fixed-point numbers and numeric
primitives are provided using the
LosslessTryFromandLosslessTryIntotraits. The source cannot have more fractional bits than the destination. - Checked conversions between fixed-point numbers and numeric primitives are
provided using the
FromFixedandToFixedtraits, or using thefrom_numandto_nummethods and their checked versions. - Additionally,
azcasts are implemented for conversion between fixed-point numbers and numeric primitives. - Fixed-point numbers can be parsed from decimal strings using
FromStr, and from binary, octal and hexadecimal strings using thefrom_str_binary,from_str_octalandfrom_str_hexmethods. The result is rounded to the nearest, with ties rounded to even. - Fixed-point numbers can be converted to strings using
Display,Binary,Octal,LowerHex,UpperHex,LowerExpandUpperExp. The output is rounded to the nearest, with ties rounded to even. - All fixed-point numbers are plain old data, so
bytemuckbit casting conversions can be used.
Quick examples
#![feature(generic_const_exprs)]
use fixed::types::I20F12;
// 19/3 = 6 1/3
let six_and_third = I20F12::from_num(19) / 3;
// four decimal digits for 12 binary digits
assert_eq!(six_and_third.to_string(), "6.3333");
// find the ceil and convert to i32
assert_eq!(six_and_third.ceil().to_num::<i32>(), 7);
// we can also compare directly to integers
assert_eq!(six_and_third.ceil(), 7);The type I20F12 is a 32-bit fixed-point signed number with 20 integer bits
and 12 fractional bits. It is an alias to FixedI32<12>. The
unsigned counterpart would be U20F12. Aliases are provided for all
combinations of integer and fractional bits adding up to a total of eight, 16,
32, 64 or 128 bits.
#![feature(generic_const_exprs)]
use fixed::types::{I4F4, I4F12};
// -8 ≤ I4F4 < 8 with steps of 1/16 (~0.06)
let a = I4F4::from_num(1);
// multiplication and division by integers are possible
let ans1 = a / 5 * 17;
// 1 / 5 × 17 = 3 2/5 (3.4), but we get 3 3/16 (~3.2)
assert_eq!(ans1, I4F4::from_bits((3 << 4) + 3));
assert_eq!(ans1.to_string(), "3.2");
// -8 ≤ I4F12 < 8 with steps of 1/4096 (~0.0002)
let wider_a = I4F12::from(a);
let wider_ans = wider_a / 5 * 17;
let ans2 = I4F4::from_num(wider_ans);
// now the answer is the much closer 3 6/16 (~3.4)
assert_eq!(ans2, I4F4::from_bits((3 << 4) + 6));
assert_eq!(ans2.to_string(), "3.4");The second example shows some precision and conversion issues. The low precision
of a means that a / 5 is 3⁄16 instead of 1⁄5, leading to an inaccurate
result ans1 = 3 3⁄16 (~3.2). With a higher precision, we get wider_a / 5
equal to 819⁄4096, leading to a more accurate intermediate result wider_ans =
3 1635⁄4096. When we convert back to four fractional bits, we get ans2 = 3
6⁄16 (~3.4).
Note that we can convert from I4F4 to I4F12 using From, as the
target type has the same number of integer bits and a larger number of
fractional bits. Converting from I4F12 to I4F4 cannot use From as we
have less fractional bits, so we use from_num instead.
Writing fixed-point constants and values literally
The lit method, which is available as a const function, can be used to
parse literals. It supports
- underscores as separators;
- prefixes “
0b”, “0o” and “0x” for binary, octal and hexadecimal numbers; - an optional decimal exponent with separator “
e” or “E” for decimal, binary and octal numbers, or with separator “@” for all supported radices including hexadecimal.
#![feature(generic_const_exprs)]
use fixed::types::I16F16;
// 0.1275e2 is 12.75
const TWELVE_POINT_75: I16F16 = I16F16::lit("0.127_5e2");
// 1.8 hexadecimal is 1.5 decimal, and 18@-1 is 1.8
const ONE_POINT_5: I16F16 = I16F16::lit("0x_18@-1");
// 12.75 + 1.5 = 14.25
let sum = TWELVE_POINT_75 + ONE_POINT_5;
assert_eq!(sum, 14.25);Using the fixed crate
The fixed crate is available on crates.io. To use it in your crate, add it as a dependency inside Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
fixed = "2.0.0-alpha.12"
This alpha version of the fixed crate requires the nightly compiler with the
generic_const_exprs feature enabled.
Optional features
The fixed crate has these optional feature:
arbitrary, disabled by default. This provides the generation of arbitrary fixed-point numbers from raw, unstructured data. This feature requires the arbitrary crate.serde, disabled by default. This provides serialization support for the fixed-point types. This feature requires the serde crate.std, disabled by default. This is for features that are not possible underno_std: currently the implementation of theErrortrait forParseFixedError.serde-str, disabled by default. Fixed-point numbers are serialized as strings showing the value when using human-readable formats. This feature requires theserdeand thestdoptional features. With this feature, serialization is only supported for fixed-point numbers where the number of fractional bits is from zero to the total number of bits. Warning: numbers serialized when this feature is enabled cannot be deserialized when this feature is disabled, and vice versa.
To enable features, you can add the dependency like this to Cargo.toml:
[dependencies.fixed]
version = "2.0.0-alpha.12"
features = ["serde"]
Experimental optional features
It is not considered a breaking change if the following experimental features are removed. The removal of experimental features would however require a minor version bump. Similarly, on a minor version bump, optional dependencies can be updated to an incompatible newer version.
borsh, disabled by default. This implements serialization and deserialization using the borsh crate. (The plan is to promote this to an optional feature once the borsh crate reaches version 1.0.0.)num-traits, disabled by default. This implements some traits from the num-traits crate. (The plan is to promote this to an optional feature once the num-traits crate reaches version 1.0.0.)
Porting from version 1 to version 2
To port from version 1 to version 2, the following is required:
-
Temporary change required until the
generic_const_exprsfeature are stabilized: use the nightly compiler and enable thegeneric_const_exprsfeature using#![feature(generic_const_exprs)] -
Use integer literals instead of typenum integer constants, for example
FixedI32<8>instead ofFixedI32<U8>. -
The
Fixedtrait constraints have been relaxed, and the methods which needed the strict constraints have been moved to the subtraitFixedStrict. For code that uses these trait methods,Fixedshould be replaced byFixedStrict. -
The
FRAC_NBITSandINT_NBITSassociated constants of typeu32were replaced byFRAC_BITSandINT_BITSof typei32. -
For the
Unwrappedwrapper, the methodsfrom_str_binary,from_str_octalandfrom_str_hexreturn the value directly instead of aResult. -
The deprecated
F128Bitsstruct has been removed. It was replaced byF128in version 1.18.0 -
The deprecated
const_fixed_from_intmacro has been removed. It was replaced by theconst_from_intmethod in version 1.20.0. -
The deprecated optional features
azandf16were removed. These features had no effect, as their functionality has been unconditionally enabled since version 1.7.0.
License
This crate is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either
- the Apache License, Version 2.0 or
- the MIT License
at your option.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache License, Version 2.0, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
Modules
- Mathematical constants.
- Constants specific to the
F128quadruple-precision floating-point type. - A prelude to import useful traits.
- Traits for conversions and for generic use of fixed-point numbers.
- Type aliases for all supported fixed-point numbers.
Structs
- A binary128 floating-point number (
f128). - An eight-bit signed number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 16-bit signed number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 32-bit signed number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 64-bit signed number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 128-bit signed number with
FRACfractional bits. - An eight-bit unsigned number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 16-bit unsigned number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 32-bit unsigned number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 64-bit unsigned number with
FRACfractional bits. - A 128-bit unsigned number with
FRACfractional bits. - An error which can be returned when parsing a fixed-point number.
- Provides saturating arithmetic on fixed-point numbers.
- Provides arithmetic operations that panic on overflow even when debug assertions are disabled.
- Provides intentionally wrapped arithmetic on fixed-point numbers.
Enums
- An error which can be returned when parsing a fixed-point number with a given radix.