| // Copyright 2012 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
| // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
| // met: |
| // |
| // * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
| // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
| // * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above |
| // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following |
| // disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided |
| // with the distribution. |
| // * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its |
| // contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived |
| // from this software without specific prior written permission. |
| // |
| // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
| // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
| // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
| // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
| // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, |
| // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY |
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| // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE |
| // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| |
| #include <wtf/dtoa/fast-dtoa.h> |
| |
| #include <wtf/dtoa/cached-powers.h> |
| #include <wtf/dtoa/diy-fp.h> |
| #include <wtf/dtoa/ieee.h> |
| |
| namespace WTF { |
| namespace double_conversion { |
| |
| // The minimal and maximal target exponent define the range of w's binary |
| // exponent, where 'w' is the result of multiplying the input by a cached power |
| // of ten. |
| // |
| // A different range might be chosen on a different platform, to optimize digit |
| // generation, but a smaller range requires more powers of ten to be cached. |
| static const int kMinimalTargetExponent = -60; |
| static const int kMaximalTargetExponent = -32; |
| |
| |
| // Adjusts the last digit of the generated number, and screens out generated |
| // solutions that may be inaccurate. A solution may be inaccurate if it is |
| // outside the safe interval, or if we cannot prove that it is closer to the |
| // input than a neighboring representation of the same length. |
| // |
| // Input: * buffer containing the digits of too_high / 10^kappa |
| // * the buffer's length |
| // * distance_too_high_w == (too_high - w).f() * unit |
| // * unsafe_interval == (too_high - too_low).f() * unit |
| // * rest = (too_high - buffer * 10^kappa).f() * unit |
| // * ten_kappa = 10^kappa * unit |
| // * unit = the common multiplier |
| // Output: returns true if the buffer is guaranteed to contain the closest |
| // representable number to the input. |
| // Modifies the generated digits in the buffer to approach (round towards) w. |
| static bool RoundWeed(BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int length, |
| uint64_t distance_too_high_w, |
| uint64_t unsafe_interval, |
| uint64_t rest, |
| uint64_t ten_kappa, |
| uint64_t unit) { |
| uint64_t small_distance = distance_too_high_w - unit; |
| uint64_t big_distance = distance_too_high_w + unit; |
| // Let w_low = too_high - big_distance, and |
| // w_high = too_high - small_distance. |
| // Note: w_low < w < w_high |
| // |
| // The real w (* unit) must lie somewhere inside the interval |
| // ]w_low; w_high[ (often written as "(w_low; w_high)") |
| |
| // Basically the buffer currently contains a number in the unsafe interval |
| // ]too_low; too_high[ with too_low < w < too_high |
| // |
| // too_high - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| // ^v 1 unit ^ ^ ^ ^ |
| // boundary_high --------------------- . . . . |
| // ^v 1 unit . . . . |
| // - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + - - + - - - - - - . . |
| // . . ^ . . |
| // . big_distance . . . |
| // . . . . rest |
| // small_distance . . . . |
| // v . . . . |
| // w_high - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . |
| // ^v 1 unit . . . . |
| // w ---------------------------------------- . . . . |
| // ^v 1 unit v . . . |
| // w_low - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . |
| // . . v |
| // buffer --------------------------------------------------+-------+-------- |
| // . . |
| // safe_interval . |
| // v . |
| // - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . |
| // ^v 1 unit . |
| // boundary_low ------------------------- unsafe_interval |
| // ^v 1 unit v |
| // too_low - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
| // |
| // |
| // Note that the value of buffer could lie anywhere inside the range too_low |
| // to too_high. |
| // |
| // boundary_low, boundary_high and w are approximations of the real boundaries |
| // and v (the input number). They are guaranteed to be precise up to one unit. |
| // In fact the error is guaranteed to be strictly less than one unit. |
| // |
| // Anything that lies outside the unsafe interval is guaranteed not to round |
| // to v when read again. |
| // Anything that lies inside the safe interval is guaranteed to round to v |
| // when read again. |
| // If the number inside the buffer lies inside the unsafe interval but not |
| // inside the safe interval then we simply do not know and bail out (returning |
| // false). |
| // |
| // Similarly we have to take into account the imprecision of 'w' when finding |
| // the closest representation of 'w'. If we have two potential |
| // representations, and one is closer to both w_low and w_high, then we know |
| // it is closer to the actual value v. |
| // |
| // By generating the digits of too_high we got the largest (closest to |
| // too_high) buffer that is still in the unsafe interval. In the case where |
| // w_high < buffer < too_high we try to decrement the buffer. |
| // This way the buffer approaches (rounds towards) w. |
| // There are 3 conditions that stop the decrementation process: |
| // 1) the buffer is already below w_high |
| // 2) decrementing the buffer would make it leave the unsafe interval |
| // 3) decrementing the buffer would yield a number below w_high and farther |
| // away than the current number. In other words: |
| // (buffer{-1} < w_high) && w_high - buffer{-1} > buffer - w_high |
| // Instead of using the buffer directly we use its distance to too_high. |
| // Conceptually rest ~= too_high - buffer |
| // We need to do the following tests in this order to avoid over- and |
| // underflows. |
| ASSERT(rest <= unsafe_interval); |
| while (rest < small_distance && // Negated condition 1 |
| unsafe_interval - rest >= ten_kappa && // Negated condition 2 |
| (rest + ten_kappa < small_distance || // buffer{-1} > w_high |
| small_distance - rest >= rest + ten_kappa - small_distance)) { |
| buffer[length - 1]--; |
| rest += ten_kappa; |
| } |
| |
| // We have approached w+ as much as possible. We now test if approaching w- |
| // would require changing the buffer. If yes, then we have two possible |
| // representations close to w, but we cannot decide which one is closer. |
| if (rest < big_distance && |
| unsafe_interval - rest >= ten_kappa && |
| (rest + ten_kappa < big_distance || |
| big_distance - rest > rest + ten_kappa - big_distance)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| // Weeding test. |
| // The safe interval is [too_low + 2 ulp; too_high - 2 ulp] |
| // Since too_low = too_high - unsafe_interval this is equivalent to |
| // [too_high - unsafe_interval + 4 ulp; too_high - 2 ulp] |
| // Conceptually we have: rest ~= too_high - buffer |
| return (2 * unit <= rest) && (rest <= unsafe_interval - 4 * unit); |
| } |
| |
| |
| // Rounds the buffer upwards if the result is closer to v by possibly adding |
| // 1 to the buffer. If the precision of the calculation is not sufficient to |
| // round correctly, return false. |
| // The rounding might shift the whole buffer in which case the kappa is |
| // adjusted. For example "99", kappa = 3 might become "10", kappa = 4. |
| // |
| // If 2*rest > ten_kappa then the buffer needs to be round up. |
| // rest can have an error of +/- 1 unit. This function accounts for the |
| // imprecision and returns false, if the rounding direction cannot be |
| // unambiguously determined. |
| // |
| // Precondition: rest < ten_kappa. |
| static bool RoundWeedCounted(BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int length, |
| uint64_t rest, |
| uint64_t ten_kappa, |
| uint64_t unit, |
| int* kappa) { |
| ASSERT(rest < ten_kappa); |
| // The following tests are done in a specific order to avoid overflows. They |
| // will work correctly with any uint64 values of rest < ten_kappa and unit. |
| // |
| // If the unit is too big, then we don't know which way to round. For example |
| // a unit of 50 means that the real number lies within rest +/- 50. If |
| // 10^kappa == 40 then there is no way to tell which way to round. |
| if (unit >= ten_kappa) return false; |
| // Even if unit is just half the size of 10^kappa we are already completely |
| // lost. (And after the previous test we know that the expression will not |
| // over/underflow.) |
| if (ten_kappa - unit <= unit) return false; |
| // If 2 * (rest + unit) <= 10^kappa we can safely round down. |
| if ((ten_kappa - rest > rest) && (ten_kappa - 2 * rest >= 2 * unit)) { |
| return true; |
| } |
| // If 2 * (rest - unit) >= 10^kappa, then we can safely round up. |
| if ((rest > unit) && (ten_kappa - (rest - unit) <= (rest - unit))) { |
| // Increment the last digit recursively until we find a non '9' digit. |
| buffer[length - 1]++; |
| for (int i = length - 1; i > 0; --i) { |
| if (buffer[i] != '0' + 10) break; |
| buffer[i] = '0'; |
| buffer[i - 1]++; |
| } |
| // If the first digit is now '0'+ 10 we had a buffer with all '9's. With the |
| // exception of the first digit all digits are now '0'. Simply switch the |
| // first digit to '1' and adjust the kappa. Example: "99" becomes "10" and |
| // the power (the kappa) is increased. |
| if (buffer[0] == '0' + 10) { |
| buffer[0] = '1'; |
| (*kappa) += 1; |
| } |
| return true; |
| } |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the biggest power of ten that is less than or equal to the given |
| // number. We furthermore receive the maximum number of bits 'number' has. |
| // |
| // Returns power == 10^(exponent_plus_one-1) such that |
| // power <= number < power * 10. |
| // If number_bits == 0 then 0^(0-1) is returned. |
| // The number of bits must be <= 32. |
| // Precondition: number < (1 << (number_bits + 1)). |
| |
| // Inspired by the method for finding an integer log base 10 from here: |
| // http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#IntegerLog10 |
| static unsigned int const kSmallPowersOfTen[] = |
| {0, 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, 100000, 1000000, 10000000, 100000000, |
| 1000000000}; |
| |
| static void BiggestPowerTen(uint32_t number, |
| int number_bits, |
| uint32_t* power, |
| int* exponent_plus_one) { |
| ASSERT(number < (1u << (number_bits + 1))); |
| // 1233/4096 is approximately 1/lg(10). |
| int exponent_plus_one_guess = ((number_bits + 1) * 1233 >> 12); |
| // We increment to skip over the first entry in the kPowersOf10 table. |
| // Note: kPowersOf10[i] == 10^(i-1). |
| exponent_plus_one_guess++; |
| // We don't have any guarantees that 2^number_bits <= number. |
| if (number < kSmallPowersOfTen[exponent_plus_one_guess]) { |
| exponent_plus_one_guess--; |
| } |
| *power = kSmallPowersOfTen[exponent_plus_one_guess]; |
| *exponent_plus_one = exponent_plus_one_guess; |
| } |
| |
| // Generates the digits of input number w. |
| // w is a floating-point number (DiyFp), consisting of a significand and an |
| // exponent. Its exponent is bounded by kMinimalTargetExponent and |
| // kMaximalTargetExponent. |
| // Hence -60 <= w.e() <= -32. |
| // |
| // Returns false if it fails, in which case the generated digits in the buffer |
| // should not be used. |
| // Preconditions: |
| // * low, w and high are correct up to 1 ulp (unit in the last place). That |
| // is, their error must be less than a unit of their last digits. |
| // * low.e() == w.e() == high.e() |
| // * low < w < high, and taking into account their error: low~ <= high~ |
| // * kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() <= kMaximalTargetExponent |
| // Postconditions: returns false if procedure fails. |
| // otherwise: |
| // * buffer is not null-terminated, but len contains the number of digits. |
| // * buffer contains the shortest possible decimal digit-sequence |
| // such that LOW < buffer * 10^kappa < HIGH, where LOW and HIGH are the |
| // correct values of low and high (without their error). |
| // * if more than one decimal representation gives the minimal number of |
| // decimal digits then the one closest to W (where W is the correct value |
| // of w) is chosen. |
| // Remark: this procedure takes into account the imprecision of its input |
| // numbers. If the precision is not enough to guarantee all the postconditions |
| // then false is returned. This usually happens rarely (~0.5%). |
| // |
| // Say, for the sake of example, that |
| // w.e() == -48, and w.f() == 0x1234567890abcdef |
| // w's value can be computed by w.f() * 2^w.e() |
| // We can obtain w's integral digits by simply shifting w.f() by -w.e(). |
| // -> w's integral part is 0x1234 |
| // w's fractional part is therefore 0x567890abcdef. |
| // Printing w's integral part is easy (simply print 0x1234 in decimal). |
| // In order to print its fraction we repeatedly multiply the fraction by 10 and |
| // get each digit. Example the first digit after the point would be computed by |
| // (0x567890abcdef * 10) >> 48. -> 3 |
| // The whole thing becomes slightly more complicated because we want to stop |
| // once we have enough digits. That is, once the digits inside the buffer |
| // represent 'w' we can stop. Everything inside the interval low - high |
| // represents w. However we have to pay attention to low, high and w's |
| // imprecision. |
| static bool DigitGen(DiyFp low, |
| DiyFp w, |
| DiyFp high, |
| BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int* length, |
| int* kappa) { |
| ASSERT(low.e() == w.e() && w.e() == high.e()); |
| ASSERT(low.f() + 1 <= high.f() - 1); |
| ASSERT(kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() && w.e() <= kMaximalTargetExponent); |
| // low, w and high are imprecise, but by less than one ulp (unit in the last |
| // place). |
| // If we remove (resp. add) 1 ulp from low (resp. high) we are certain that |
| // the new numbers are outside of the interval we want the final |
| // representation to lie in. |
| // Inversely adding (resp. removing) 1 ulp from low (resp. high) would yield |
| // numbers that are certain to lie in the interval. We will use this fact |
| // later on. |
| // We will now start by generating the digits within the uncertain |
| // interval. Later we will weed out representations that lie outside the safe |
| // interval and thus _might_ lie outside the correct interval. |
| uint64_t unit = 1; |
| DiyFp too_low = DiyFp(low.f() - unit, low.e()); |
| DiyFp too_high = DiyFp(high.f() + unit, high.e()); |
| // too_low and too_high are guaranteed to lie outside the interval we want the |
| // generated number in. |
| DiyFp unsafe_interval = DiyFp::Minus(too_high, too_low); |
| // We now cut the input number into two parts: the integral digits and the |
| // fractionals. We will not write any decimal separator though, but adapt |
| // kappa instead. |
| // Reminder: we are currently computing the digits (stored inside the buffer) |
| // such that: too_low < buffer * 10^kappa < too_high |
| // We use too_high for the digit_generation and stop as soon as possible. |
| // If we stop early we effectively round down. |
| DiyFp one = DiyFp(static_cast<uint64_t>(1) << -w.e(), w.e()); |
| // Division by one is a shift. |
| uint32_t integrals = static_cast<uint32_t>(too_high.f() >> -one.e()); |
| // Modulo by one is an and. |
| uint64_t fractionals = too_high.f() & (one.f() - 1); |
| uint32_t divisor; |
| int divisor_exponent_plus_one; |
| BiggestPowerTen(integrals, DiyFp::kSignificandSize - (-one.e()), |
| &divisor, &divisor_exponent_plus_one); |
| *kappa = divisor_exponent_plus_one; |
| *length = 0; |
| // Loop invariant: buffer = too_high / 10^kappa (integer division) |
| // The invariant holds for the first iteration: kappa has been initialized |
| // with the divisor exponent + 1. And the divisor is the biggest power of ten |
| // that is smaller than integrals. |
| while (*kappa > 0) { |
| int digit = integrals / divisor; |
| ASSERT(digit <= 9); |
| buffer[*length] = static_cast<char>('0' + digit); |
| (*length)++; |
| integrals %= divisor; |
| (*kappa)--; |
| // Note that kappa now equals the exponent of the divisor and that the |
| // invariant thus holds again. |
| uint64_t rest = |
| (static_cast<uint64_t>(integrals) << -one.e()) + fractionals; |
| // Invariant: too_high = buffer * 10^kappa + DiyFp(rest, one.e()) |
| // Reminder: unsafe_interval.e() == one.e() |
| if (rest < unsafe_interval.f()) { |
| // Rounding down (by not emitting the remaining digits) yields a number |
| // that lies within the unsafe interval. |
| return RoundWeed(buffer, *length, DiyFp::Minus(too_high, w).f(), |
| unsafe_interval.f(), rest, |
| static_cast<uint64_t>(divisor) << -one.e(), unit); |
| } |
| divisor /= 10; |
| } |
| |
| // The integrals have been generated. We are at the point of the decimal |
| // separator. In the following loop we simply multiply the remaining digits by |
| // 10 and divide by one. We just need to pay attention to multiply associated |
| // data (like the interval or 'unit'), too. |
| // Note that the multiplication by 10 does not overflow, because w.e >= -60 |
| // and thus one.e >= -60. |
| ASSERT(one.e() >= -60); |
| ASSERT(fractionals < one.f()); |
| ASSERT(UINT64_2PART_C(0xFFFFFFFF, FFFFFFFF) / 10 >= one.f()); |
| for (;;) { |
| fractionals *= 10; |
| unit *= 10; |
| unsafe_interval.set_f(unsafe_interval.f() * 10); |
| // Integer division by one. |
| int digit = static_cast<int>(fractionals >> -one.e()); |
| ASSERT(digit <= 9); |
| buffer[*length] = static_cast<char>('0' + digit); |
| (*length)++; |
| fractionals &= one.f() - 1; // Modulo by one. |
| (*kappa)--; |
| if (fractionals < unsafe_interval.f()) { |
| return RoundWeed(buffer, *length, DiyFp::Minus(too_high, w).f() * unit, |
| unsafe_interval.f(), fractionals, one.f(), unit); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| // Generates (at most) requested_digits digits of input number w. |
| // w is a floating-point number (DiyFp), consisting of a significand and an |
| // exponent. Its exponent is bounded by kMinimalTargetExponent and |
| // kMaximalTargetExponent. |
| // Hence -60 <= w.e() <= -32. |
| // |
| // Returns false if it fails, in which case the generated digits in the buffer |
| // should not be used. |
| // Preconditions: |
| // * w is correct up to 1 ulp (unit in the last place). That |
| // is, its error must be strictly less than a unit of its last digit. |
| // * kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() <= kMaximalTargetExponent |
| // |
| // Postconditions: returns false if procedure fails. |
| // otherwise: |
| // * buffer is not null-terminated, but length contains the number of |
| // digits. |
| // * the representation in buffer is the most precise representation of |
| // requested_digits digits. |
| // * buffer contains at most requested_digits digits of w. If there are less |
| // than requested_digits digits then some trailing '0's have been removed. |
| // * kappa is such that |
| // w = buffer * 10^kappa + eps with |eps| < 10^kappa / 2. |
| // |
| // Remark: This procedure takes into account the imprecision of its input |
| // numbers. If the precision is not enough to guarantee all the postconditions |
| // then false is returned. This usually happens rarely, but the failure-rate |
| // increases with higher requested_digits. |
| static bool DigitGenCounted(DiyFp w, |
| int requested_digits, |
| BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int* length, |
| int* kappa) { |
| ASSERT(kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() && w.e() <= kMaximalTargetExponent); |
| ASSERT(kMinimalTargetExponent >= -60); |
| ASSERT(kMaximalTargetExponent <= -32); |
| // w is assumed to have an error less than 1 unit. Whenever w is scaled we |
| // also scale its error. |
| uint64_t w_error = 1; |
| // We cut the input number into two parts: the integral digits and the |
| // fractional digits. We don't emit any decimal separator, but adapt kappa |
| // instead. Example: instead of writing "1.2" we put "12" into the buffer and |
| // increase kappa by 1. |
| DiyFp one = DiyFp(static_cast<uint64_t>(1) << -w.e(), w.e()); |
| // Division by one is a shift. |
| uint32_t integrals = static_cast<uint32_t>(w.f() >> -one.e()); |
| // Modulo by one is an and. |
| uint64_t fractionals = w.f() & (one.f() - 1); |
| uint32_t divisor; |
| int divisor_exponent_plus_one; |
| BiggestPowerTen(integrals, DiyFp::kSignificandSize - (-one.e()), |
| &divisor, &divisor_exponent_plus_one); |
| *kappa = divisor_exponent_plus_one; |
| *length = 0; |
| |
| // Loop invariant: buffer = w / 10^kappa (integer division) |
| // The invariant holds for the first iteration: kappa has been initialized |
| // with the divisor exponent + 1. And the divisor is the biggest power of ten |
| // that is smaller than 'integrals'. |
| while (*kappa > 0) { |
| int digit = integrals / divisor; |
| ASSERT(digit <= 9); |
| buffer[*length] = static_cast<char>('0' + digit); |
| (*length)++; |
| requested_digits--; |
| integrals %= divisor; |
| (*kappa)--; |
| // Note that kappa now equals the exponent of the divisor and that the |
| // invariant thus holds again. |
| if (requested_digits == 0) break; |
| divisor /= 10; |
| } |
| |
| if (requested_digits == 0) { |
| uint64_t rest = |
| (static_cast<uint64_t>(integrals) << -one.e()) + fractionals; |
| return RoundWeedCounted(buffer, *length, rest, |
| static_cast<uint64_t>(divisor) << -one.e(), w_error, |
| kappa); |
| } |
| |
| // The integrals have been generated. We are at the point of the decimal |
| // separator. In the following loop we simply multiply the remaining digits by |
| // 10 and divide by one. We just need to pay attention to multiply associated |
| // data (the 'unit'), too. |
| // Note that the multiplication by 10 does not overflow, because w.e >= -60 |
| // and thus one.e >= -60. |
| ASSERT(one.e() >= -60); |
| ASSERT(fractionals < one.f()); |
| ASSERT(UINT64_2PART_C(0xFFFFFFFF, FFFFFFFF) / 10 >= one.f()); |
| while (requested_digits > 0 && fractionals > w_error) { |
| fractionals *= 10; |
| w_error *= 10; |
| // Integer division by one. |
| int digit = static_cast<int>(fractionals >> -one.e()); |
| ASSERT(digit <= 9); |
| buffer[*length] = static_cast<char>('0' + digit); |
| (*length)++; |
| requested_digits--; |
| fractionals &= one.f() - 1; // Modulo by one. |
| (*kappa)--; |
| } |
| if (requested_digits != 0) return false; |
| return RoundWeedCounted(buffer, *length, fractionals, one.f(), w_error, |
| kappa); |
| } |
| |
| |
| // Provides a decimal representation of v. |
| // Returns true if it succeeds, otherwise the result cannot be trusted. |
| // There will be *length digits inside the buffer (not null-terminated). |
| // If the function returns true then |
| // v == (double) (buffer * 10^decimal_exponent). |
| // The digits in the buffer are the shortest representation possible: no |
| // 0.09999999999999999 instead of 0.1. The shorter representation will even be |
| // chosen even if the longer one would be closer to v. |
| // The last digit will be closest to the actual v. That is, even if several |
| // digits might correctly yield 'v' when read again, the closest will be |
| // computed. |
| static bool Grisu3(double v, |
| FastDtoaMode mode, |
| BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int* length, |
| int* decimal_exponent) { |
| DiyFp w = Double(v).AsNormalizedDiyFp(); |
| // boundary_minus and boundary_plus are the boundaries between v and its |
| // closest floating-point neighbors. Any number strictly between |
| // boundary_minus and boundary_plus will round to v when convert to a double. |
| // Grisu3 will never output representations that lie exactly on a boundary. |
| DiyFp boundary_minus, boundary_plus; |
| if (mode == FAST_DTOA_SHORTEST) { |
| Double(v).NormalizedBoundaries(&boundary_minus, &boundary_plus); |
| } else { |
| ASSERT(mode == FAST_DTOA_SHORTEST_SINGLE); |
| float single_v = static_cast<float>(v); |
| Single(single_v).NormalizedBoundaries(&boundary_minus, &boundary_plus); |
| } |
| ASSERT(boundary_plus.e() == w.e()); |
| DiyFp ten_mk; // Cached power of ten: 10^-k |
| int mk; // -k |
| int ten_mk_minimal_binary_exponent = |
| kMinimalTargetExponent - (w.e() + DiyFp::kSignificandSize); |
| int ten_mk_maximal_binary_exponent = |
| kMaximalTargetExponent - (w.e() + DiyFp::kSignificandSize); |
| PowersOfTenCache::GetCachedPowerForBinaryExponentRange( |
| ten_mk_minimal_binary_exponent, |
| ten_mk_maximal_binary_exponent, |
| &ten_mk, &mk); |
| ASSERT((kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() + ten_mk.e() + |
| DiyFp::kSignificandSize) && |
| (kMaximalTargetExponent >= w.e() + ten_mk.e() + |
| DiyFp::kSignificandSize)); |
| // Note that ten_mk is only an approximation of 10^-k. A DiyFp only contains a |
| // 64 bit significand and ten_mk is thus only precise up to 64 bits. |
| |
| // The DiyFp::Times procedure rounds its result, and ten_mk is approximated |
| // too. The variable scaled_w (as well as scaled_boundary_minus/plus) are now |
| // off by a small amount. |
| // In fact: scaled_w - w*10^k < 1ulp (unit in the last place) of scaled_w. |
| // In other words: let f = scaled_w.f() and e = scaled_w.e(), then |
| // (f-1) * 2^e < w*10^k < (f+1) * 2^e |
| DiyFp scaled_w = DiyFp::Times(w, ten_mk); |
| ASSERT(scaled_w.e() == |
| boundary_plus.e() + ten_mk.e() + DiyFp::kSignificandSize); |
| // In theory it would be possible to avoid some recomputations by computing |
| // the difference between w and boundary_minus/plus (a power of 2) and to |
| // compute scaled_boundary_minus/plus by subtracting/adding from |
| // scaled_w. However the code becomes much less readable and the speed |
| // enhancements are not terriffic. |
| DiyFp scaled_boundary_minus = DiyFp::Times(boundary_minus, ten_mk); |
| DiyFp scaled_boundary_plus = DiyFp::Times(boundary_plus, ten_mk); |
| |
| // DigitGen will generate the digits of scaled_w. Therefore we have |
| // v == (double) (scaled_w * 10^-mk). |
| // Set decimal_exponent == -mk and pass it to DigitGen. If scaled_w is not an |
| // integer than it will be updated. For instance if scaled_w == 1.23 then |
| // the buffer will be filled with "123" und the decimal_exponent will be |
| // decreased by 2. |
| int kappa; |
| bool result = DigitGen(scaled_boundary_minus, scaled_w, scaled_boundary_plus, |
| buffer, length, &kappa); |
| *decimal_exponent = -mk + kappa; |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| |
| // The "counted" version of grisu3 (see above) only generates requested_digits |
| // number of digits. This version does not generate the shortest representation, |
| // and with enough requested digits 0.1 will at some point print as 0.9999999... |
| // Grisu3 is too imprecise for real halfway cases (1.5 will not work) and |
| // therefore the rounding strategy for halfway cases is irrelevant. |
| static bool Grisu3Counted(double v, |
| int requested_digits, |
| BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int* length, |
| int* decimal_exponent) { |
| DiyFp w = Double(v).AsNormalizedDiyFp(); |
| DiyFp ten_mk; // Cached power of ten: 10^-k |
| int mk; // -k |
| int ten_mk_minimal_binary_exponent = |
| kMinimalTargetExponent - (w.e() + DiyFp::kSignificandSize); |
| int ten_mk_maximal_binary_exponent = |
| kMaximalTargetExponent - (w.e() + DiyFp::kSignificandSize); |
| PowersOfTenCache::GetCachedPowerForBinaryExponentRange( |
| ten_mk_minimal_binary_exponent, |
| ten_mk_maximal_binary_exponent, |
| &ten_mk, &mk); |
| ASSERT((kMinimalTargetExponent <= w.e() + ten_mk.e() + |
| DiyFp::kSignificandSize) && |
| (kMaximalTargetExponent >= w.e() + ten_mk.e() + |
| DiyFp::kSignificandSize)); |
| // Note that ten_mk is only an approximation of 10^-k. A DiyFp only contains a |
| // 64 bit significand and ten_mk is thus only precise up to 64 bits. |
| |
| // The DiyFp::Times procedure rounds its result, and ten_mk is approximated |
| // too. The variable scaled_w (as well as scaled_boundary_minus/plus) are now |
| // off by a small amount. |
| // In fact: scaled_w - w*10^k < 1ulp (unit in the last place) of scaled_w. |
| // In other words: let f = scaled_w.f() and e = scaled_w.e(), then |
| // (f-1) * 2^e < w*10^k < (f+1) * 2^e |
| DiyFp scaled_w = DiyFp::Times(w, ten_mk); |
| |
| // We now have (double) (scaled_w * 10^-mk). |
| // DigitGen will generate the first requested_digits digits of scaled_w and |
| // return together with a kappa such that scaled_w ~= buffer * 10^kappa. (It |
| // will not always be exactly the same since DigitGenCounted only produces a |
| // limited number of digits.) |
| int kappa; |
| bool result = DigitGenCounted(scaled_w, requested_digits, |
| buffer, length, &kappa); |
| *decimal_exponent = -mk + kappa; |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| |
| bool FastDtoa(double v, |
| FastDtoaMode mode, |
| int requested_digits, |
| BufferReference<char> buffer, |
| int* length, |
| int* decimal_point) { |
| ASSERT(v > 0); |
| ASSERT(!Double(v).IsSpecial()); |
| |
| bool result = false; |
| int decimal_exponent = 0; |
| switch (mode) { |
| case FAST_DTOA_SHORTEST: |
| case FAST_DTOA_SHORTEST_SINGLE: |
| result = Grisu3(v, mode, buffer, length, &decimal_exponent); |
| break; |
| case FAST_DTOA_PRECISION: |
| result = Grisu3Counted(v, requested_digits, |
| buffer, length, &decimal_exponent); |
| break; |
| default: |
| UNREACHABLE(); |
| } |
| if (result) { |
| *decimal_point = *length + decimal_exponent; |
| buffer[*length] = '\0'; |
| } |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace double_conversion |
| } // namespace WTF |