# # # Nim's Runtime Library # (c) Copyright 2015 Andreas Rumpf # # See the file "copying.txt", included in this # distribution, for details about the copyright. # ## Constructive mathematics is naturally typed. -- Simon Thompson ## ## Basic math routines for Nim. ## This module is available for the `JavaScript target ## `_. ## ## Note that the trigonometric functions naturally operate on radians. ## The helper functions `degToRad` and `radToDeg` provide conversion ## between radians and degrees. include "system/inclrtl" {.push debugger:off .} # the user does not want to trace a part # of the standard library! proc binom*(n, k: int): int {.noSideEffect.} = ## Computes the binomial coefficient if k <= 0: return 1 if 2*k > n: return binom(n, n-k) result = n for i in countup(2, k): result = (result * (n + 1 - i)) div i proc fac*(n: int): int {.noSideEffect.} = ## Computes the faculty/factorial function. result = 1 for i in countup(2, n): result = result * i {.push checks:off, line_dir:off, stack_trace:off.} when defined(Posix) and not defined(haiku): {.passl: "-lm".} const PI* = 3.1415926535897932384626433 ## the circle constant PI (Ludolph's number) TAU* = 2.0 * PI ## the circle constant TAU (= 2 * PI) E* = 2.71828182845904523536028747 ## Euler's number MaxFloat64Precision* = 16 ## maximum number of meaningful digits ## after the decimal point for Nim's ## ``float64`` type. MaxFloat32Precision* = 8 ## maximum number of meaningful digits ## after the decimal point for Nim's ## ``float32`` type. MaxFloatPrecision* = MaxFloat64Precision ## maximum number of ## meaningful digits ## after the decimal point ## for Nim's ``float`` type. RadPerDeg = PI / 180.0 ## number of radians per degree type FloatClass* = enum ## describes the class a floating point value belongs to. ## This is the type that is returned by `classify`. fcNormal, ## value is an ordinary nonzero floating point value fcSubnormal, ## value is a subnormal (a very small) floating point value fcZero, ## value is zero fcNegZero, ## value is the negative zero fcNan, ## value is Not-A-Number (NAN) fcInf, ## value is positive infinity fcNegInf ## value is negative infinity proc classify*(x: float): FloatClass = ## Classifies a floating point value. Returns `x`'s class as specified by ## `FloatClass`. # JavaScript and most C compilers have no classify: if x == 0.0: if 1.0/x == Inf: return fcZero else: return fcNegZero if x*0.5 == x: if x > 0.0: return fcInf else: return fcNegInf if x != x: return fcNan return fcNormal # XXX: fcSubnormal is not detected! proc isPowerOfTwo*(x: int): bool {.noSideEffect.} = ## Returns true, if `x` is a power of two, false otherwise. ## Zero and negative numbers are not a power of two. return (x > 0) and ((x and (x - 1)) == 0) proc nextPowerOfTwo*(x: int): int {.noSideEffect.} = ## Returns `x` rounded up to the nearest power of two. ## Zero and negative numbers get rounded up to 1. result = x - 1 when defined(cpu64): result = result or (result shr 32) when sizeof(int) > 2: result = result or (result shr 16) when sizeof(int) > 1: result = result or (result shr 8) result = result or (result shr 4) result = result or (result shr 2) result = result or (result shr 1) result += 1 + ord(x<=0) proc countBits32*(n: int32): int {.noSideEffect.} = ## Counts the set bits in `n`. var v = n v = v -% ((v shr 1'i32) and 0x55555555'i32) v = (v and 0x33333333'i32) +% ((v shr 2'i32) and 0x33333333'i32) result = ((v +% (v shr 4'i32) and 0xF0F0F0F'i32) *% 0x1010101'i32) shr 24'i32 proc sum*[T](x: openArray[T]): T {.noSideEffect.} = ## Computes the sum of the elements in `x`. ## If `x` is empty, 0 is returned. for i in items(x): result = result + i {.push noSideEffect.} when not defined(JS): proc sqrt*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "sqrtf", header: "".} proc sqrt*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "sqrt", header: "".} ## Computes the square root of `x`. proc cbrt*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "cbrtf", header: "".} proc cbrt*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "cbrt", header: "".} ## Computes the cubic root of `x` proc ln*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "logf", header: "".} proc ln*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "log", header: "".} ## Computes the natural log of `x` proc log10*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "log10f", header: "".} proc log10*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "log10", header: "".} ## Computes the common logarithm (base 10) of `x` proc log2*[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = return ln(x) / ln(2.0) ## Computes the binary logarithm (base 2) of `x` proc exp*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "expf", header: "".} proc exp*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "exp", header: "".} ## Computes the exponential function of `x` (pow(E, x)) proc arccos*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "acosf", header: "".} proc arccos*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "acos", header: "".} ## Computes the arc cosine of `x` proc arcsin*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "asinf", header: "".} proc arcsin*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "asin", header: "".} ## Computes the arc sine of `x` proc arctan*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "atanf", header: "".} proc arctan*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "atan", header: "".} ## Calculate the arc tangent of `y` / `x` proc arctan2*(y, x: float32): float32 {.importc: "atan2f", header: "".} proc arctan2*(y, x: float64): float64 {.importc: "atan2", header: "".} ## Calculate the arc tangent of `y` / `x`. ## `atan2` returns the arc tangent of `y` / `x`; it produces correct ## results even when the resulting angle is near pi/2 or -pi/2 ## (`x` near 0). proc cos*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "cosf", header: "".} proc cos*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "cos", header: "".} ## Computes the cosine of `x` proc cosh*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "coshf", header: "".} proc cosh*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "cosh", header: "".} ## Computes the hyperbolic cosine of `x` proc hypot*(x, y: float32): float32 {.importc: "hypotf", header: "".} proc hypot*(x, y: float64): float64 {.importc: "hypot", header: "".} ## Computes the hypotenuse of a right-angle triangle with `x` and ## `y` as its base and height. Equivalent to ``sqrt(x*x + y*y)``. proc sinh*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "sinhf", header: "".} proc sinh*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "sinh", header: "".} ## Computes the hyperbolic sine of `x` proc sin*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "sinf", header: "".} proc sin*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "sin", header: "".} ## Computes the sine of `x` proc tan*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "tanf", header: "".} proc tan*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "tan", header: "".} ## Computes the tangent of `x` proc tanh*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "tanhf", header: "".} proc tanh*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "tanh", header: "".} ## Computes the hyperbolic tangent of `x` proc pow*(x, y: float32): float32 {.importc: "powf", header: "".} proc pow*(x, y: float64): float64 {.importc: "pow", header: "".} ## computes x to power raised of y. proc erf*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "erff", header: "".} proc erf*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "erf", header: "".} ## The error function proc erfc*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "erfcf", header: "".} proc erfc*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "erfc", header: "".} ## The complementary error function proc lgamma*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "lgammaf", header: "".} proc lgamma*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "lgamma", header: "".} ## Natural log of the gamma function proc tgamma*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "tgammaf", header: "".} proc tgamma*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "tgamma", header: "".} ## The gamma function proc floor*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "floorf", header: "".} proc floor*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "floor", header: "".} ## Computes the floor function (i.e., the largest integer not greater than `x`) ## ## .. code-block:: nim ## echo floor(-3.5) ## -4.0 proc ceil*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "ceilf", header: "".} proc ceil*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "ceil", header: "".} ## Computes the ceiling function (i.e., the smallest integer not less than `x`) ## ## .. code-block:: nim ## echo ceil(-2.1) ## -2.0 when defined(windows) and (defined(vcc) or defined(bcc)): # MSVC 2010 don't have trunc/truncf # this implementation was inspired by Go-lang Math.Trunc proc truncImpl(f: float64): float64 = const mask : uint64 = 0x7FF shift: uint64 = 64 - 12 bias : uint64 = 0x3FF if f < 1: if f < 0: return -truncImpl(-f) elif f == 0: return f # Return -0 when f == -0 else: return 0 var x = cast[uint64](f) let e = (x shr shift) and mask - bias # Keep the top 12+e bits, the integer part; clear the rest. if e < 64-12: x = x and (not (1'u64 shl (64'u64-12'u64-e) - 1'u64)) result = cast[float64](x) proc truncImpl(f: float32): float32 = const mask : uint32 = 0xFF shift: uint32 = 32 - 9 bias : uint32 = 0x7F if f < 1: if f < 0: return -truncImpl(-f) elif f == 0: return f # Return -0 when f == -0 else: return 0 var x = cast[uint32](f) let e = (x shr shift) and mask - bias # Keep the top 9+e bits, the integer part; clear the rest. if e < 32-9: x = x and (not (1'u32 shl (32'u32-9'u32-e) - 1'u32)) result = cast[float32](x) proc trunc*(x: float64): float64 = if classify(x) in {fcZero, fcNegZero, fcNan, fcInf, fcNegInf}: return x result = truncImpl(x) proc trunc*(x: float32): float32 = if classify(x) in {fcZero, fcNegZero, fcNan, fcInf, fcNegInf}: return x result = truncImpl(x) proc round0[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = ## Windows compilers prior to MSVC 2012 do not implement 'round', ## 'roundl' or 'roundf'. result = if x < 0.0: ceil(x - T(0.5)) else: floor(x + T(0.5)) else: proc round0(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "roundf", header: "".} proc round0(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "round", header: "".} ## Rounds a float to zero decimal places. Used internally by the round ## function when the specified number of places is 0. proc trunc*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "truncf", header: "".} proc trunc*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "trunc", header: "".} ## Truncates `x` to the decimal point ## ## .. code-block:: nim ## echo trunc(PI) # 3.0 proc fmod*(x, y: float32): float32 {.importc: "fmodf", header: "".} proc fmod*(x, y: float64): float64 {.importc: "fmod", header: "".} ## Computes the remainder of `x` divided by `y` ## ## .. code-block:: nim ## echo fmod(-2.5, 0.3) ## -0.1 else: proc floor*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.floor", nodecl.} proc floor*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.floor", nodecl.} proc ceil*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.ceil", nodecl.} proc ceil*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.ceil", nodecl.} proc sqrt*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.sqrt", nodecl.} proc sqrt*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.sqrt", nodecl.} proc ln*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.log", nodecl.} proc ln*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.log", nodecl.} proc log10*[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = return ln(x) / ln(10.0) proc log2*[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = return ln(x) / ln(2.0) proc exp*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.exp", nodecl.} proc exp*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.exp", nodecl.} proc round0(x: float): float {.importc: "Math.round", nodecl.} proc pow*(x, y: float32): float32 {.importC: "Math.pow", nodecl.} proc pow*(x, y: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.pow", nodecl.} proc arccos*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.acos", nodecl.} proc arccos*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.acos", nodecl.} proc arcsin*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.asin", nodecl.} proc arcsin*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.asin", nodecl.} proc arctan*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.atan", nodecl.} proc arctan*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.atan", nodecl.} proc arctan2*(y, x: float32): float32 {.importC: "Math.atan2", nodecl.} proc arctan2*(y, x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.atan2", nodecl.} proc cos*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.cos", nodecl.} proc cos*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.cos", nodecl.} proc cosh*(x: float32): float32 = return (exp(x)+exp(-x))*0.5 proc cosh*(x: float64): float64 = return (exp(x)+exp(-x))*0.5 proc hypot*[T: float32|float64](x, y: T): T = return sqrt(x*x + y*y) proc sinh*[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = return (exp(x)-exp(-x))*0.5 proc sin*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.sin", nodecl.} proc sin*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.sin", nodecl.} proc tan*(x: float32): float32 {.importc: "Math.tan", nodecl.} proc tan*(x: float64): float64 {.importc: "Math.tan", nodecl.} proc tanh*[T: float32|float64](x: T): T = var y = exp(2.0*x) return (y-1.0)/(y+1.0) proc round*[T: float32|float64](x: T, places: int = 0): T = ## Round a floating point number. ## ## If `places` is 0 (or omitted), round to the nearest integral value ## following normal mathematical rounding rules (e.g. `round(54.5) -> 55.0`). ## If `places` is greater than 0, round to the given number of decimal ## places, e.g. `round(54.346, 2) -> 54.35`. ## If `places` is negative, round to the left of the decimal place, e.g. ## `round(537.345, -1) -> 540.0` if places == 0: result = round0(x) else: var mult = pow(10.0, places.T) result = round0(x*mult)/mult when not defined(JS): proc frexp*(x: float32, exponent: var int): float32 {. importc: "frexp", header: "".} proc frexp*(x: float64, exponent: var int): float64 {. importc: "frexp", header: "".} ## Split a number into mantissa and exponent. ## `frexp` calculates the mantissa m (a float greater than or equal to 0.5 ## and less than 1) and the integer value n such that `x` (the original ## float value) equals m * 2**n. frexp stores n in `exponent` and returns ## m. else: proc frexp*[T: float32|float64](x: T, exponent: var int): T = if x == 0.0: exponent = 0 result = 0.0 elif x < 0.0: result = -frexp(-x, exponent) else: var ex = floor(log2(x)) exponent = round(ex) result = x / pow(2.0, ex) proc splitDecimal*[T: float32|float64](x: T): tuple[intpart: T, floatpart: T] = ## Breaks `x` into an integral and a fractional part. ## ## Returns a tuple containing intpart and floatpart representing ## the integer part and the fractional part respectively. ## ## Both parts have the same sign as `x`. Analogous to the `modf` ## function in C. var absolute: T absolute = abs(x) result.intpart = floor(absolute) result.floatpart = absolute - result.intpart if x < 0: result.intpart = -result.intpart result.floatpart = -result.floatpart {.pop.} proc degToRad*[T: float32|float64](d: T): T {.inline.} = ## Convert from degrees to radians result = T(d) * RadPerDeg proc radToDeg*[T: float32|float64](d: T): T {.inline.} = ## Convert from radians to degrees result = T(d) / RadPerDeg proc `mod`*[T: float32|float64](x, y: T): T = ## Computes the modulo operation for float operators. Equivalent ## to ``x - y * floor(x/y)``. Note that the remainder will always ## have the same sign as the divisor. ## ## .. code-block:: nim ## echo (4.0 mod -3.1) # -2.2 result = if y == 0.0: x else: x - y * (x/y).floor {.pop.} {.pop.} proc `^`*[T](x, y: T): T = ## Computes ``x`` to the power ``y`. ``x`` must be non-negative, use ## `pow <#pow,float,float>` for negative exponents. assert y >= T(0) var (x, y) = (x, y) result = 1 while true: if (y and 1) != 0: result *= x y = y shr 1 if y == 0: break x *= x proc gcd*[T](x, y: T): T = ## Computes the greatest common divisor of ``x`` and ``y``. ## Note that for floats, the result cannot always be interpreted as ## "greatest decimal `z` such that ``z*N == x and z*M == y`` ## where N and M are positive integers." var (x,y) = (x,y) while y != 0: x = x mod y swap x, y abs x proc lcm*[T](x, y: T): T = ## Computes the least common multiple of ``x`` and ``y``. x div gcd(x, y) * y when isMainModule and not defined(JS): # Check for no side effect annotation proc mySqrt(num: float): float {.noSideEffect.} = return sqrt(num) # check gamma function assert($tgamma(5.0) == $24.0) # 4! assert(lgamma(1.0) == 0.0) # ln(1.0) == 0.0 assert(erf(6.0) > erf(5.0)) assert(erfc(6.0) < erfc(5.0)) when isMainModule: # Function for approximate comparison of floats proc `==~`(x, y: float): bool = (abs(x-y) < 1e-9) block: # round() tests # Round to 0 decimal places doAssert round(54.652) ==~ 55.0 doAssert round(54.352) ==~ 54.0 doAssert round(-54.652) ==~ -55.0 doAssert round(-54.352) ==~ -54.0 doAssert round(0.0) ==~ 0.0 # Round to positive decimal places doAssert round(-547.652, 1) ==~ -547.7 doAssert round(547.652, 1) ==~ 547.7 doAssert round(-547.652, 2) ==~ -547.65 doAssert round(547.652, 2) ==~ 547.65 # Round to negative decimal places doAssert round(547.652, -1) ==~ 550.0 doAssert round(547.652, -2) ==~ 500.0 doAssert round(547.652, -3) ==~ 1000.0 doAssert round(547.652, -4) ==~ 0.0 doAssert round(-547.652, -1) ==~ -550.0 doAssert round(-547.652, -2) ==~ -500.0 doAssert round(-547.652, -3) ==~ -1000.0 doAssert round(-547.652, -4) ==~ 0.0 block: # splitDecimal() tests doAssert splitDecimal(54.674).intpart ==~ 54.0 doAssert splitDecimal(54.674).floatpart ==~ 0.674 doAssert splitDecimal(-693.4356).intpart ==~ -693.0 doAssert splitDecimal(-693.4356).floatpart ==~ -0.4356 doAssert splitDecimal(0.0).intpart ==~ 0.0 doAssert splitDecimal(0.0).floatpart ==~ 0.0 block: # trunc tests for vcc doAssert(trunc(-1.1) == -1) doAssert(trunc(1.1) == 1) doAssert(trunc(-0.1) == -0) doAssert(trunc(0.1) == 0) #special case doAssert(classify(trunc(1e1000000)) == fcInf) doAssert(classify(trunc(-1e1000000)) == fcNegInf) doAssert(classify(trunc(0.0/0.0)) == fcNan) doAssert(classify(trunc(0.0)) == fcZero) #trick the compiler to produce signed zero let f_neg_one = -1.0 f_zero = 0.0 f_nan = f_zero / f_zero doAssert(classify(trunc(f_neg_one*f_zero)) == fcNegZero) doAssert(trunc(-1.1'f32) == -1) doAssert(trunc(1.1'f32) == 1) doAssert(trunc(-0.1'f32) == -0) doAssert(trunc(0.1'f32) == 0) doAssert(classify(trunc(1e1000000'f32)) == fcInf) doAssert(classify(trunc(-1e1000000'f32)) == fcNegInf) doAssert(classify(trunc(f_nan.float32)) == fcNan) doAssert(classify(trunc(0.0'f32)) == fcZero)