man Math::BigFloat () - Arbitrary size floating point math package

NAME

Math::BigFloat - Arbitrary size floating point math package

SYNOPSIS

  use Math::BigFloat;

  # Number creation
  $x = Math::BigFloat->new($str);       # defaults to 0
  $nan  = Math::BigFloat->bnan();       # create a NotANumber
  $zero = Math::BigFloat->bzero();      # create a +0
  $inf = Math::BigFloat->binf();        # create a +inf
  $inf = Math::BigFloat->binf('-');     # create a -inf
  $one = Math::BigFloat->bone();        # create a +1
  $one = Math::BigFloat->bone('-');     # create a -1

  # Testing
  $x->is_zero();                # true if arg is +0
  $x->is_nan();                 # true if arg is NaN
  $x->is_one();                 # true if arg is +1
  $x->is_one('-');              # true if arg is -1
  $x->is_odd();                 # true if odd, false for even
  $x->is_even();                # true if even, false for odd
  $x->is_pos();                 # true if >= 0
  $x->is_neg();                 # true if <  0
  $x->is_inf(sign);             # true if +inf, or -inf (default is '+')

  $x->bcmp($y);                 # compare numbers (undef,<0,=0,>0)
  $x->bacmp($y);                # compare absolutely (undef,<0,=0,>0)
  $x->sign();                   # return the sign, either +,- or NaN
  $x->digit($n);                # return the nth digit, counting from right
  $x->digit(-$n);               # return the nth digit, counting from left

  # The following all modify their first argument. If you want to preserve
  # $x, use $z = $x->copy()->bXXX($y); See under L<CAVEATS> for why this is
  # neccessary when mixing $a = $b assigments with non-overloaded math.

  # set 
  $x->bzero();                  # set $i to 0
  $x->bnan();                   # set $i to NaN
  $x->bone();                   # set $x to +1
  $x->bone('-');                # set $x to -1
  $x->binf();                   # set $x to inf
  $x->binf('-');                # set $x to -inf

  $x->bneg();                   # negation
  $x->babs();                   # absolute value
  $x->bnorm();                  # normalize (no-op)
  $x->bnot();                   # two's complement (bit wise not)
  $x->binc();                   # increment x by 1
  $x->bdec();                   # decrement x by 1

  $x->badd($y);                 # addition (add $y to $x)
  $x->bsub($y);                 # subtraction (subtract $y from $x)
  $x->bmul($y);                 # multiplication (multiply $x by $y)
  $x->bdiv($y);                 # divide, set $x to quotient
                                # return (quo,rem) or quo if scalar

  $x->bmod($y);                 # modulus ($x % $y)
  $x->bpow($y);                 # power of arguments ($x ** $y)
  $x->blsft($y);                # left shift
  $x->brsft($y);                # right shift 
                                # return (quo,rem) or quo if scalar

  $x->blog();                   # logarithm of $x to base e (Euler's number)
  $x->blog($base);              # logarithm of $x to base $base (f.i. 2)

  $x->band($y);                 # bit-wise and
  $x->bior($y);                 # bit-wise inclusive or
  $x->bxor($y);                 # bit-wise exclusive or
  $x->bnot();                   # bit-wise not (two's complement)

  $x->bsqrt();                  # calculate square-root
  $x->broot($y);                # $y'th root of $x (e.g. $y == 3 => cubic root)
  $x->bfac();                   # factorial of $x (1*2*3*4*..$x)

  $x->bround($N);               # accuracy: preserve $N digits
  $x->bfround($N);              # precision: round to the $Nth digit

  $x->bfloor();                 # return integer less or equal than $x
  $x->bceil();                  # return integer greater or equal than $x

  # The following do not modify their arguments:

  bgcd(@values);                # greatest common divisor
  blcm(@values);                # lowest common multiplicator

  $x->bstr();                   # return string
  $x->bsstr();                  # return string in scientific notation

  $x->as_int();                 # return $x as BigInt 
  $x->exponent();               # return exponent as BigInt
  $x->mantissa();               # return mantissa as BigInt
  $x->parts();                  # return (mantissa,exponent) as BigInt

  $x->length();                 # number of digits (w/o sign and '.')
  ($l,$f) = $x->length();       # number of digits, and length of fraction

  $x->precision();              # return P of $x (or global, if P of $x undef)
  $x->precision($n);            # set P of $x to $n
  $x->accuracy();               # return A of $x (or global, if A of $x undef)
  $x->accuracy($n);             # set A $x to $n

  # these get/set the appropriate global value for all BigFloat objects
  Math::BigFloat->precision();  # Precision
  Math::BigFloat->accuracy();   # Accuracy
  Math::BigFloat->round_mode(); # rounding mode

DESCRIPTION

All operators (inlcuding basic math operations) are overloaded if you declare your big floating point numbers as

  $i = new Math::BigFloat '12_3.456_789_123_456_789E-2';

Operations with overloaded operators preserve the arguments, which is exactly what you expect.

Canonical notation

Input to these routines are either BigFloat objects, or strings of the following four forms:

•
CW/^[+-]\d+$/
•
CW/^[+-]\d+\.\d*$/
•
CW/^[+-]\d+E[+-]?\d+$/
•
CW/^[+-]\d*\.\d+E[+-]?\d+$/

all with optional leading and trailing zeros and/or spaces. Additonally, numbers are allowed to have an underscore between any two digits.

Empty strings as well as other illegal numbers results in 'NaN'.

bnorm() on a BigFloat object is now effectively a no-op, since the numbers are always stored in normalized form. On a string, it creates a BigFloat object.

Output

Output values are BigFloat objects (normalized), except for bstr() and bsstr().

The string output will always have leading and trailing zeros stripped and drop a plus sign. CWbstr() will give you always the form with a decimal point, while CWbsstr() (s for scientific) gives you the scientific notation.

        Input                   bstr()          bsstr()
        '-0'                    '0'             '0E1'
        '  -123 123 123'        '-123123123'    '-123123123E0'
        '00.0123'               '0.0123'        '123E-4'
        '123.45E-2'             '1.2345'        '12345E-4'
        '10E+3'                 '10000'         '1E4'

Some routines (CWis_odd(), CWis_even(), CWis_zero(), CWis_one(), CWis_nan()) return true or false, while others (CWbcmp(), CWbacmp()) return either undef, <0, 0 or >0 and are suited for sort.

Actual math is done by using the class defined with CWwith = Class;> (which defaults to BigInts) to represent the mantissa and exponent.

The sign CW/^[+-]$/ is stored separately. The string 'NaN' is used to represent the result when input arguments are not numbers, as well as the result of dividing by zero. CWmantissa() and CWexponent() return the said parts of the BigFloat as BigInts such that:

        $m = $x->mantissa();
        $e = $x->exponent();
        $y = $m * ( 10 ** $e );
        print "ok\n" if $x == $y;

CW($m,$e) = $x->parts(); is just a shortcut giving you both of them.

A zero is represented and returned as CW0E1, not CW0E0 (after Knuth).

Currently the mantissa is reduced as much as possible, favouring higher exponents over lower ones (e.g. returning 1e7 instead of 10e6 or 10000000e0). This might change in the future, so do not depend on it.

Accuracy vs. Precision

See also: Rounding.

Math::BigFloat supports both precision (rounding to a certain place before or after the dot) and accuracy (rounding to a certain number of digits). For a full documentation, examples and tips on these topics please see the large section about rounding in Math::BigInt.

Since things like CWsqrt(2) or CW1 / 3 must presented with a limited accuracy lest a operation consumes all resources, each operation produces no more than the requested number of digits.

If there is no gloabl precision or accuracy set, and the operation in question was not called with a requested precision or accuracy, and the input CW$x has no accuracy or precision set, then a fallback parameter will be used. For historical reasons, it is called CWdiv_scale and can be accessed via:

        $d = Math::BigFloat->div_scale();               # query
        Math::BigFloat->div_scale($n);                  # set to $n digits

The default value for CWdiv_scale is 40.

In case the result of one operation has more digits than specified, it is rounded. The rounding mode taken is either the default mode, or the one supplied to the operation after the scale:

        $x = Math::BigFloat->new(2);
        Math::BigFloat->accuracy(5);            # 5 digits max
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3);               # will give 0.66667
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3,6);             # will give 0.666667
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3,6,undef,'odd'); # will give 0.666667
        Math::BigFloat->round_mode('zero');
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3,6);             # will also give 0.666667

Note that CWMath::BigFloat->accuracy() and CWMath::BigFloat->precision() set the global variables, and thus any newly created number will be subject to the global rounding immidiately. This means that in the examples above, the CW3 as argument to CWbdiv() will also get an accuracy of 5.

It is less confusing to either calculate the result fully, and afterwards round it explicitely, or use the additional parameters to the math functions like so:

        use Math::BigFloat;     
        $x = Math::BigFloat->new(2);
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3);
        print $y->bround(5),"\n";               # will give 0.66667

        or

        use Math::BigFloat;     
        $x = Math::BigFloat->new(2);
        $y = $x->copy()->bdiv(3,5);             # will give 0.66667
        print "$y\n";

Rounding

ffround ( +$scale )
Rounds to the CW$scale'th place left from the '.', counting from the dot. The first digit is numbered 1.
ffround ( -$scale )
Rounds to the CW$scale'th place right from the '.', counting from the dot.
ffround ( 0 )
Rounds to an integer.
fround ( +$scale )
Preserves accuracy to CW$scale digits from the left (aka significant digits) and pads the rest with zeros. If the number is between 1 and -1, the significant digits count from the first non-zero after the '.'
fround ( -$scale ) and fround ( 0 )
These are effectively no-ops.

All rounding functions take as a second parameter a rounding mode from one of the following: 'even', 'odd', '+inf', '-inf', 'zero' or 'trunc'.

The default rounding mode is 'even'. By using CWMath::BigFloat->round_mode($round_mode); you can get and set the default mode for subsequent rounding. The usage of CW$Math::BigFloat::$round_mode is no longer supported. The second parameter to the round functions then overrides the default temporarily.

The CWas_number() function returns a BigInt from a Math::BigFloat. It uses 'trunc' as rounding mode to make it equivalent to:

        $x = 2.5;
        $y = int($x) + 2;

You can override this by passing the desired rounding mode as parameter to CWas_number():

        $x = Math::BigFloat->new(2.5);
        $y = $x->as_number('odd');      # $y = 3

METHODS

accuracy

        $x->accuracy(5);                # local for $x
        CLASS->accuracy(5);             # global for all members of CLASS
                                        # Note: This also applies to new()!

        $A = $x->accuracy();            # read out accuracy that affects $x
        $A = CLASS->accuracy();         # read out global accuracy

Set or get the global or local accuracy, aka how many significant digits the results have. If you set a global accuracy, then this also applies to new()!

Warning! The accuracy sticks, e.g. once you created a number under the influence of CWCLASS->accuracy($A), all results from math operations with that number will also be rounded.

In most cases, you should probably round the results explicitely using one of round(), bround() or bfround() or by passing the desired accuracy to the math operation as additional parameter:

        my $x = Math::BigInt->new(3);
        my $y = Math::BigInt->new(7);
        print scalar $x->copy()->bdiv($y, 2);           # print 4300
        print scalar $x->copy()->bdiv($y)->bround(2);   # print 4300

precision()

        $x->precision(-2);      # local for $x, round at the second digit right of the dot
        $x->precision(2);       # ditto, round at the second digit left of the dot

        CLASS->precision(5);    # Global for all members of CLASS
                                # This also applies to new()!
        CLASS->precision(-5);   # ditto

        $P = CLASS->precision();        # read out global precision
        $P = $x->precision();           # read out precision that affects $x

Note: You probably want to use accuracy() instead. With accuracy you set the number of digits each result should have, with precision you set the place where to round!

Autocreating constants

After CWuse Math::BigFloat ':constant' all the floating point constants in the given scope are converted to CWMath::BigFloat. This conversion happens at compile time.

In particular

  perl -MMath::BigFloat=:constant -e 'print 2E-100,"\n"'

prints the value of CW2E-100. Note that without conversion of constants the expression 2E-100 will be calculated as normal floating point number.

Please note that ':constant' does not affect integer constants, nor binary nor hexadecimal constants. Use bignum or Math::BigInt to get this to work.

Math library

Math with the numbers is done (by default) by a module called Math::BigInt::Calc. This is equivalent to saying:

        use Math::BigFloat lib => 'Calc';

You can change this by using:

        use Math::BigFloat lib => 'BitVect';

The following would first try to find Math::BigInt::Foo, then Math::BigInt::Bar, and when this also fails, revert to Math::BigInt::Calc:

        use Math::BigFloat lib => 'Foo,Math::BigInt::Bar';

Calc.pm uses as internal format an array of elements of some decimal base (usually 1e7, but this might be differen for some systems) with the least significant digit first, while BitVect.pm uses a bit vector of base 2, most significant bit first. Other modules might use even different means of representing the numbers. See the respective module documentation for further details.

Please note that Math::BigFloat does not use the denoted library itself, but it merely passes the lib argument to Math::BigInt. So, instead of the need to do:

        use Math::BigInt lib => 'GMP';
        use Math::BigFloat;

you can roll it all into one line:

        use Math::BigFloat lib => 'GMP';

It is also possible to just require Math::BigFloat:

        require Math::BigFloat;

This will load the neccessary things (like BigInt) when they are needed, and automatically.

Use the lib, Luke! And see Using Math::BigInt::Lite for more details than you ever wanted to know about loading a different library.

Using Math::BigInt::Lite

It is possible to use Math::BigInt::Lite with Math::BigFloat:

        # 1
        use Math::BigFloat with => 'Math::BigInt::Lite';

There is no need to use Math::BigInt or use Math::BigInt::Lite, but you can combine these if you want. For instance, you may want to use Math::BigInt objects in your main script, too.

        # 2
        use Math::BigInt;
        use Math::BigFloat with => 'Math::BigInt::Lite';

Of course, you can combine this with the CWlib parameter.

        # 3
        use Math::BigFloat with => 'Math::BigInt::Lite', lib => 'GMP,Pari';

There is no need for a use Math::BigInt; statement, even if you want to use Math::BigInt's, since Math::BigFloat will needs Math::BigInt and thus always loads it. But if you add it, add it before:

        # 4
        use Math::BigInt;
        use Math::BigFloat with => 'Math::BigInt::Lite', lib => 'GMP,Pari';

Notice that the module with the last CWlib will win and thus it's lib will be used if the lib is available:

        # 5
        use Math::BigInt lib => 'Bar,Baz';
        use Math::BigFloat with => 'Math::BigInt::Lite', lib => 'Foo';

That would try to load Foo, Bar, Baz and Calc (in that order). Or in other words, Math::BigFloat will try to retain previously loaded libs when you don't specify it onem but if you specify one, it will try to load them.

Actually, the lib loading order would be Bar,Baz,Calc, and then Foo,Bar,Baz,Calc, but independend of which lib exists, the result is the same as trying the latter load alone, except for the fact that one of Bar or Baz might be loaded needlessly in an intermidiate step (and thus hang around and waste memory). If neither Bar nor Baz exist (or don't work/compile), they will still be tried to be loaded, but this is not as time/memory consuming as actually loading one of them. Still, this type of usage is not recommended due to these issues.

The old way (loading the lib only in BigInt) still works though:

        # 6
        use Math::BigInt lib => 'Bar,Baz';
        use Math::BigFloat;

You can even load Math::BigInt afterwards:

        # 7
        use Math::BigFloat;
        use Math::BigInt lib => 'Bar,Baz';

But this has the same problems like #5, it will first load Calc (Math::BigFloat needs Math::BigInt and thus loads it) and then later Bar or Baz, depending on which of them works and is usable/loadable. Since this loads Calc unnecc., it is not recommended.

Since it also possible to just require Math::BigFloat, this poses the question about what libary this will use:

        require Math::BigFloat;
        my $x = Math::BigFloat->new(1); $x += 123;

It will use Calc. Please note that the call to import() is still done, but only when you use for the first time some Math::BigFloat math (it is triggered via any constructor, so the first time you create a Math::BigFloat, the load will happen in the background). This means:

        require Math::BigFloat;
        Math::BigFloat->import ( lib => 'Foo,Bar' );

would be the same as:

        use Math::BigFloat lib => 'Foo, Bar';

But don't try to be clever to insert some operations in between:

        require Math::BigFloat;
        my $x = Math::BigFloat->bone() + 4;             # load BigInt and Calc
        Math::BigFloat->import( lib => 'Pari' );        # load Pari, too
        $x = Math::BigFloat->bone()+4;                  # now use Pari

While this works, it loads Calc needlessly. But maybe you just wanted that?

Examples #3 is highly recommended for daily usage.

BUGS

Please see the file BUGS in the CPAN distribution Math::BigInt for known bugs.

CAVEATS

stringify, bstr()
Both stringify and bstr() now drop the leading '+'. The old code would return '+1.23', the new returns '1.23'. See the documentation in Math::BigInt for reasoning and details.
bdiv
The following will probably not do what you expect:
        print $c->bdiv(123.456),"\n";
It prints both quotient and reminder since print works in list context. Also, bdiv() will modify CW$c, so be carefull. You probably want to use
        print $c / 123.456,"\n";
        print scalar $c->bdiv(123.456),"\n";  # or if you want to modify $c
instead.
Modifying and =
Beware of:
        $x = Math::BigFloat->new(5);
        $y = $x;
It will not do what you think, e.g. making a copy of CW$x. Instead it just makes a second reference to the same object and stores it in CW$y. Thus anything that modifies CW$x will modify CW$y (except overloaded math operators), and vice versa. See Math::BigInt for details and how to avoid that.
bpow
CWbpow() now modifies the first argument, unlike the old code which left it alone and only returned the result. This is to be consistent with CWbadd() etc. The first will modify CW$x, the second one won't:
        print bpow($x,$i),"\n";         # modify $x
        print $x->bpow($i),"\n";        # ditto
        print $x ** $i,"\n";            # leave $x alone
precision() vs. accuracy()
A common pitfall is to use precision() when you want to round a result to a certain number of digits:
        use Math::BigFloat;
        Math::BigFloat->precision(4);           # does not do what you think it does
        my $x = Math::BigFloat->new(1);     # rounds $x to "12000"!
        print "$x\n";                           # print "12000"
        my $y = Math::BigFloat->new(3);         # rounds $y to "0"!
        print "$y\n";                           # print "0"
        $z = $x / $y;                           # 12000 / 0 => NaN!
        print "$z\n";
        print $z->precision(),"\n";             # 4
Replacing precision with accuracy is probably not what you want, either:
        use Math::BigFloat;
        Math::BigFloat->accuracy(4);            # enables global rounding:
        my $x = Math::BigFloat->new(1);    # rounded immidiately to "12350"
        print "$x\n";                           # print "123500"
        my $y = Math::BigFloat->new(3);         # rounded to "3
        print "$y\n";                           # print "3"
        print $z = $x->copy()->bdiv($y),"\n";   # 41170
        print $z->accuracy(),"\n";              # 4
What you want to use instead is:
        use Math::BigFloat;
        my $x = Math::BigFloat->new(1);    # no rounding
        print "$x\n";                           # print "123456"
        my $y = Math::BigFloat->new(3);         # no rounding
        print "$y\n";                           # print "3"
        print $z = $x->copy()->bdiv($y,4),"\n"; # 41150
        print $z->accuracy(),"\n";              # undef
In addition to computing what you expected, the last example also does not taint the result with an accuracy or precision setting, which would influence any further operation.

SEE ALSO

Math::BigInt, Math::BigRat and Math::Big as well as Math::BigInt::BitVect, Math::BigInt::Pari and Math::BigInt::GMP.

The pragmas bignum, bigint and bigrat might also be of interest because they solve the autoupgrading/downgrading issue, at least partly.

The package at <http://search.cpan.org/search?mode=module&query=Math%3A%3ABigInt> contains more documentation including a full version history, testcases, empty subclass files and benchmarks.

LICENSE

This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

AUTHORS

Mark Biggar, overloaded interface by Ilya Zakharevich. Completely rewritten by Tels <http://bloodgate.com> in 2001 - 2004, and still at it in 2005.