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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
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2 @c This is part of the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual.
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3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4 @c See the file lispref.texi for copying conditions.
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5 @setfilename ../../info/numbers.info
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6 @node Numbers, Strings and Characters, Lisp Data Types, Top
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7 @chapter Numbers
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8 @c #### Improve the indexing in this file!!!!
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9 @cindex integers
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10 @cindex numbers
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11
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12 XEmacs supports two to five numeric data types. @dfn{Integers} and
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13 @dfn{floating point numbers} are always supported. As a build-time
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14 option, @dfn{bignums}, @dfn{ratios}, and @dfn{bigfloats} may be
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15 enabled on some platforms.
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16
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17 Integers, which are what Common Lisp calls
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18 @dfn{fixnums}, are whole numbers such as @minus{}3, 0, #b0111, #xFEED,
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19 #o744. Their values are exact, and their range is limited. The
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20 number prefixes `#b', `#o', and `#x' are supported to represent numbers
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21 in binary, octal, and hexadecimal notation (or radix). Floating point
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22 numbers are numbers with fractional parts, such as @minus{}4.5, 0.0, or
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23 2.71828. They can also be expressed in exponential notation: 1.5e2
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24 equals 150; in this example, @samp{e2} stands for ten to the second
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25 power, and is multiplied by 1.5. Floating point values are not exact;
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26 they have a fixed, limited amount of precision.
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27
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28 Bignums are arbitrary precision integers. When supported, XEmacs can
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29 handle any integral calculations you have enough virtual memory to
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30 store. (More precisely, on current architectures the representation
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31 allows integers whose storage would exhaust the address space.) They
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32 are notated in the same way as other integers (fixnums). XEmacs
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33 automatically converts results of computations from fixnum to bignum,
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34 and back, depending on the storage required to represent the number.
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35 Thus use of bignums are entirely transparent to the user, except for a
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36 few special applications that expect overflows. Ratios are rational
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37 numbers with arbitrary precision. They are notated in the
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38 usual way with the solidus, for example 5/3 or @minus{}22/7.
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39
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40 Bigfloats are floating point numbers with arbitrary precision, which
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41 may be specified by the user (and may be different for different
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42 bigfloats at the same time). Unlike integers, which are always
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43 infinitely precise if they can be represented, floating point numbers
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44 are inherently imprecise. This means that choice of precision can be a
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45 very delicate issue. XEmacs automatically converts @emph{from float to
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46 bigfloat} when floats and bigfloats are mixed in an expression, but a
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47 bigfloat will never be converted to a float unless the user explicitly
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48 coerces the value. Nor will the result of a float operation be
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49 converted to bigfloat, except for ``contagion'' from another operand
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50 that is already a bigfloat. However, when bigfloats of differing
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51 precision are mixed, the result will always have the larger precision.
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52 The exact rules are more carefully explained elsewhere
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53 (@pxref{Canonicalization and Contagion}).
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54
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55 Note that the term ``integer'' is used throughout the XEmacs
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56 documentation and code to mean ``fixnum''. This is inconsistent with
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57 Common Lisp, and likely to cause confusion. Similarly, ``float'' is
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58 used to mean ``fixed precision floating point number'', and the Common
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59 Lisp distinctions among @dfn{short-floats}, @dfn{long-floats},
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60 @emph{etc.}, and bigfloats (which are not standardized in Common Lisp)
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61 are not reflected in XEmacs terminology. (Volunteers to fix this in the
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62 XEmacs manuals would be heartily welcomed.)
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63
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64 @menu
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65 * Integer Basics:: Representation and range of integers.
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66 * Rational Basics:: Representation and range of rational numbers.
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67 * Float Basics:: Representation and range of floating point.
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68 * The Bignum Extension:: Arbitrary precision integers, ratios, and floats.
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69 * Predicates on Numbers:: Testing for numbers.
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70 * Comparison of Numbers:: Equality and inequality predicates.
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71 * Numeric Conversions:: Converting float to integer and vice versa.
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72 * Arithmetic Operations:: How to add, subtract, multiply and divide.
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73 * Rounding Operations:: Explicitly rounding floating point numbers.
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74 * Bitwise Operations:: Logical and, or, not, shifting.
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75 * Math Functions:: Trig, exponential and logarithmic functions.
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76 * Random Numbers:: Obtaining random integers, predictable or not.
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77 @end menu
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78
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79 @node Integer Basics
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80 @section Integer Basics
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81
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82 The range of values for an integer depends on the machine. If a
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83 multiple-precision arithmetic library is available on your platform,
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84 support for bignums, that is, integers with arbitrary precision, may be
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85 compiled in to your XEmacs. The rest of this section assumes that the
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86 bignum extension is @emph{not} available. The bignum extension and the
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87 user-visible differences in normal integer arithmetic are discussed in a
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88 separate section @ref{The Bignum Extension}.
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89
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90 The minimum range is @minus{}1073741824 to 1073741823 (31 bits; i.e.,
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91 @ifinfo
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92 -2**30
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93 @end ifinfo
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94 @tex
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95 $-2^{30}$
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96 @end tex
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97 to
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98 @ifinfo
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99 2**30 - 1),
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100 @end ifinfo
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101 @tex
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102 $2^{30}-1$),
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103 @end tex
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104 but some machines may provide a wider range. Many examples in this
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105 chapter assume an integer has 31 bits.
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106 @cindex overflow
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107
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108 The range of fixnums is available to Lisp programs:
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109
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110 @defvar most-positive-fixnum
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111 The fixed-precision integer closest in value to positive infinity.
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112 @end defvar
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113
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114 @defvar most-negative-fixnum
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115 The fixed-precision integer closest in value to negative infinity.
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116 @end defvar
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117
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118 Here is a common idiom to temporarily suppress garbage collection:
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119 @example
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120 (garbage-collect)
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121 (let ((gc-cons-threshold most-positive-fixnum))
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122 ;; allocation-intensive computation
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123 )
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124 (garbage-collect)
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125 @end example
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126
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127 The Lisp reader reads an integer as a sequence of digits with optional
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128 initial sign and optional final period.
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129
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130 @example
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131 1 ; @r{The integer 1.}
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132 1. ; @r{The integer 1.}
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133 +1 ; @r{Also the integer 1.}
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134 -1 ; @r{The integer @minus{}1.}
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135 2147483648 ; @r{Read error, due to overflow.}
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136 0 ; @r{The integer 0.}
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137 -0 ; @r{The integer 0.}
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138 @end example
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139
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140 To understand how various functions work on integers, especially the
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141 bitwise operators (@pxref{Bitwise Operations}), it is often helpful to
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142 view the numbers in their binary form.
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143
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144 In 31-bit binary, the decimal integer 5 looks like this:
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145
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146 @example
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147 000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101
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148 @end example
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149
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150 @noindent
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151 (We have inserted spaces between groups of 4 bits, and two spaces
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152 between groups of 8 bits, to make the binary integer easier to read.)
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153
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154 The integer @minus{}1 looks like this:
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155
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156 @example
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157 111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111
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158 @end example
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159
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160 @noindent
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161 @cindex two's complement
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162 @minus{}1 is represented as 31 ones. (This is called @dfn{two's
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163 complement} notation.)
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164
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165 The negative integer, @minus{}5, is creating by subtracting 4 from
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166 @minus{}1. In binary, the decimal integer 4 is 100. Consequently,
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167 @minus{}5 looks like this:
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168
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169 @example
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170 111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1011
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171 @end example
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172
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173 In this implementation, the largest 31-bit binary integer is the
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174 decimal integer 1,073,741,823. In binary, it looks like this:
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175
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176 @example
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177 011 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111
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178 @end example
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179
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180 Since the arithmetic functions do not check whether integers go
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181 outside their range, when you add 1 to 1,073,741,823, the value is the
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182 negative integer @minus{}1,073,741,824:
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183
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184 @example
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185 (+ 1 1073741823)
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186 @result{} -1073741824
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187 @result{} 100 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
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188 @end example
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189
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190 Many of the arithmetic functions accept markers for arguments as well
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191 as integers. (@xref{Markers}.) More precisely, the actual arguments to
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192 such functions may be either integers or markers, which is why we often
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193 give these arguments the name @var{int-or-marker}. When the argument
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194 value is a marker, its position value is used and its buffer is ignored.
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195
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196 @ignore
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197 In version 19, except where @emph{integer} is specified as an
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198 argument, all of the functions for markers and integers also work for
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199 floating point numbers.
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200 @end ignore
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201
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202
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203 @node Rational Basics
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204 @section Rational Basics
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205
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206 Ratios (built-in rational numbers) are available only when the bignum
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207 extension is built into your XEmacs. This facility is new and
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208 experimental. It is discussed in a separate section for convenience of
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209 updating the documentation @ref{The Bignum Extension}. The following
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210 functions are defined regardless of the presence of the extension, but
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211 have trivial results for integers.
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212
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213 @defun numerator rational
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214 @cindex numbers
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215 Return the numerator of the canonical form of @var{rational}.
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216 If @var{rational} is an integer, @var{rational} is returned.
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217 @var{rational} must be an integer or a ratio.
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218 @end defun
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219
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220 @defun denominator rational
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221 Return the denominator of the canonical form of @var{rational}.
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222 If @var{rational} is an integer, 1 is returned. @var{rational} must be
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223 an integer or a ratio.
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224 @end defun
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225
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226
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227 @node Float Basics
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228 @section Floating Point Basics
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229
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230 XEmacs supports floating point numbers. The precise range of floating
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231 point numbers is machine-specific; it is the same as the range of the C
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232 data type @code{double} on the machine in question. If a
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233 multiple-precision arithmetic library is available on your platform,
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234 support for bigfloats, that is, floating point numbers with arbitrary
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235 precision, may be compiled in to your XEmacs. The rest of this section
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236 assumes that the bignum extension is @emph{not} available. The bigfloat
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237 extension and the user-visible differences in normal float arithmetic
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238 are discussed in a separate section @ref{The Bignum Extension}.
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239
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240 The printed representation for floating point numbers requires either
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241 a decimal point (with at least one digit following), an exponent, or
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242 both. For example, @samp{1500.0}, @samp{15e2}, @samp{15.0e2},
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243 @samp{1.5e3}, and @samp{.15e4} are five ways of writing a floating point
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244 number whose value is 1500. They are all equivalent. You can also use
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245 a minus sign to write negative floating point numbers, as in
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246 @samp{-1.0}.
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247
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248 @cindex IEEE floating point
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249 @cindex positive infinity
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250 @cindex negative infinity
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251 @cindex infinity
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252 @cindex NaN
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253 Most modern computers support the IEEE floating point standard, which
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254 provides for positive infinity and negative infinity as floating point
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255 values. It also provides for a class of values called NaN or
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256 ``not-a-number''; numerical functions return such values in cases where
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257 there is no correct answer. For example, @code{(sqrt -1.0)} returns a
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258 NaN. For practical purposes, there's no significant difference between
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259 different NaN values in XEmacs Lisp, and there's no rule for precisely
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260 which NaN value should be used in a particular case, so this manual
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261 doesn't try to distinguish them. XEmacs Lisp has no read syntax for NaNs
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262 or infinities; perhaps we should create a syntax in the future.
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263
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264 You can use @code{logb} to extract the binary exponent of a floating
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265 point number (or estimate the logarithm of an integer):
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266
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267 @defun logb number
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268 This function returns the binary exponent of @var{number}. More
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269 precisely, the value is the logarithm of @var{number} base 2, rounded
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270 down to an integer.
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271 @end defun
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272
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273 The range of floats is available to Lisp programs:
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274
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275 @defvar most-positive-float
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276 The fixed-precision floating-point-number closest in value to positive
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277 infinity.
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278 @end defvar
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279
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280 @defvar most-negative-float
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281 The fixed-precision floating point number closest in value to negative
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282 infinity.
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283 @end defvar
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284
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285 @defvar least-positive-float
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286 The positive float closest in value to 0. May not be normalized.
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287 @end defvar
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288
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289 @defvar least-negative-float
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290 The positive float closest in value to 0. Must be normalized.
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291 @end defvar
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292
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293 @defvar least-positive-normalized-float
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294 The negative float closest in value to 0. May not be normalized.
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295 @end defvar
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296
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297 @defvar least-negative-normalized-float
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298 The negative float closest in value to 0. Must be normalized.
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299 @end defvar
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300
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301 Note that for floating point numbers there is an interesting limit on
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302 how small they can get, as well as a limit on how big they can get. In
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303 some representations, a floating point number is @dfn{normalized} if the
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304 leading digit is non-zero. This allows representing numbers smaller
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305 than the most-negative exponent can express, by having fractional
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306 mantissas. This means that the number is less precise than a normalized
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307 floating point number, so Lisp programs can detect loss of precision due
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308 to unnormalized floats by checking whether the number is between
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309 @code{least-positive-float} and @code{least-positive-normalized-float}.
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310
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311
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312 @node The Bignum Extension
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313 @section The Bignum Extension
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314
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315 In XEmacs 21.5.18, an extension was added by @email{james@@xemacs.org,
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316 Jerry James} to allow linking with arbitrary-precision arithmetic
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317 libraries if they are available on your platform. ``Arbitrary''
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318 precision means precisely what it says. Your ability to work with large
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319 numbers is limited only by the amount of virtual memory (and time) you
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320 can throw at them.
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321
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322 As of 09 April 2004, support for the GNU Multiple Precision
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323 arithmetic library (GMP) is nearly complete, and support for the BSD
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324 Multiple Precision arithmetic library (MP) is being debugged. To enable
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325 bignum support using GMP (respectively MP), invoke configure with your
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326 usual options, and add @samp{--use-number-lib=gmp} (respectively
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327 @samp{--use-number-lib=mp}). The default is to disable bignum support,
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328 but if you are using a script to automate the build process, it may be
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329 convenient to explicitly disable support by @emph{appending}
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330 @samp{--use-number-lib=no} to your invocation of configure. GMP has an
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331 MP compatibility mode, but it is not recommended, as there remain poorly
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332 understood bugs (even more so than for other vendors' versions of MP).
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333
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334 With GMP, exact arithmetic with integers and ratios of arbitrary
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335 precision and approximate (``floating point'') arithmetic of arbitrary
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336 precision are implemented efficiently in the library. (Note that
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337 numerical implementations are quite delicate and sensitive to
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338 optimization. If the library was poorly optimized for your hardware, as
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339 is often the case with Linux distributions for 80x86, you may achieve
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340 gains of @emph{several orders of magnitude} by rebuilding the MP
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341 library. See @uref{http://www.swox.com/gmp/gmp-speed.html}.) The MP
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342 implementation provides arbitrary precision integers. Ratios and arbitrary
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343 precision floats are not available with MP.
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344
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345 If your code needs to run correctly whether or not the feature is
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346 provided, you may test for the features @code{bignum}, @code{ratio}, and
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347 @code{bigfloat}.
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348
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349 The XEmacs bignum facility implements the Common Lisp notions of
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350 @dfn{canonicalization} and @dfn{contagion}. Canonicalization means that
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351 in exact (integer and ratio) arithmetic, a result of an operation is
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352 always converted to the ``smallest'' type that can represent it
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353 exactly. For exact numbers, the user only cares if efficiency is
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354 extremely important; Lisp does not try to determine an order of
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355 computation that avoids conversion to bignum (or ratio) even if one is
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356 available. (Note that integers are never silently converted to
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357 ratios: the result of @code{(/ 1 2)} is the integer @code{0}. You can
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358 @emph{request} that a ratio be used if needed with @code{(div 1 2)}.)
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359
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360 Since floating point arithmetic is inherently imprecise, numbers are
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361 implicitly coerced to bigfloats only if other operands in the expression
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362 are bigfloat, and bigfloats are only coerced to other numerical types by
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363 explicit calls to the function @code{coerce}.
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364
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365 Bignum support is incomplete. If you would like to help with bignum
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366 support, especially on BSD MP, please subscribe to the
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367 @uref{http://www.xemacs.org/Lists/#xemacs-beta, XEmacs Beta mailing
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368 list}, and book up on @file{number-gmp.h} and @file{number-mp.h}. Jerry
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369 has promised to write internals documentation eventually, but if your
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370 skills run more to analysis and documentation than to writing new code,
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371 feel free to fill in the gap!
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372
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373 @menu
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374 * Bignum Basics:: Representation and range of integers.
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375 * Ratio Basics:: Representation and range of rational numbers.
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376 * Bigfloat Basics:: Representation and range of floating point.
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377 * Canonicalization and Contagion:: Automatic coercion to other types.
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378 * Compatibility Issues:: Changes in fixed-precision arithmetic.
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379 @end menu
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380
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381
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382 @node Bignum Basics
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383 @subsection Bignum Basics
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384
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385 In most cases, bignum support should be transparent to users and Lisp
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386 programmers. A bignum-enabled XEmacs will automatically convert from
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387 fixnums to bignums and back in pure integer arithmetic, and for GNU MP,
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388 from floats to bigfloats. (Bigfloats must be explicitly coerced to
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389 other types, even if they are exactly representable by less precise
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390 types.) The Lisp reader and printer have been enhanced to handle
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391 bignums, as have the mathematical functions. Rationals (fixnums,
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392 bignums, and ratios) are printed using the @samp{%d}, @samp{%o},
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393 @samp{%x}, and @samp{%u} format conversions.
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394
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395
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396 @node Ratio Basics
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397 @subsection Ratio Basics
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398
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399 Ratios, when available have the read syntax and print representation
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400 @samp{3/5}. Like other rationals (fixnums and bignums), they are
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401 printed using the @samp{%d}, @samp{%o}, @samp{%x}, and @samp{%u} format
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402 conversions.
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403
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404
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405 @node Bigfloat Basics
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406 @subsection Bigfloat Basics
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407
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408 Bigfloats, when available, have the same read syntax and print
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409 representations as fixed-precision floats.
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410
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2182
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411 It is possible to make bigfloat the default floating point format by
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412 setting @code{default-float-precision} to a non-zero value. Precision
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413 is given in bits, with a maximum precision of @code{bigfloat-max-prec}.
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414 @c #### is this true?
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415 Bigfloats are created automatically when a number with yes
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416
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417
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418
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419 @node Canonicalization and Contagion
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420 @subsection Canonicalization and Contagion
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421
|
|
422 @dfn{Canonicalization} is a rule intended to enhance the time and space
|
|
423 efficiency of exact arithmetic. Because bignums and ratios are
|
|
424 implemented as record objects, they take up much more space than
|
|
425 fixnums, which are implemented as an immediate object. Conversions and
|
|
426 calls to the MP library also take time. So the implementation always
|
|
427 converts the result of exact arithmetic to the smallest representation
|
|
428 that can exactly represent the quantity.
|
|
429
|
|
430 @example
|
|
431 (+ 3/4 5)
|
|
432 @result{} 23/4
|
|
433
|
|
434 (+ 3/4 1/4 2)
|
|
435 @result{} 3
|
|
436 @end example
|
|
437
|
|
438 Conversely, if an integer (read or computed) cannot be represented as a
|
|
439 fixnum, a bignum will be used. Integer division is a somewhat
|
|
440 exceptional case. Because it is useful and is the historical meaning of
|
|
441 the function @code{/}, a separate function @code{div} is provided.
|
|
442 @code{div} is identical to @code{/} except that when the rational result
|
|
443 is not an integer, it is represented exactly as a ratio. In both cases
|
|
444 if a rational result is an integer, it is automatically converted to the
|
|
445 appropriate integral representation.
|
|
446
|
|
447 Note that the efficiency gain from canonicalization is likely to be
|
|
448 less than you might think. Experience with numerical analysis shows that
|
|
449 in very precise calculations, the required precision tends to increase.
|
|
450 Thus it is typically wasted effort to attempt to convert to smaller
|
|
451 representations, as the number is often reused and requires a larger
|
|
452 representation. However, XEmacs Lisp presumes that calculations using
|
|
453 bignums are the exception, so it applies canonicalization.
|
2028
|
454
|
|
455 @dfn{Contagion} is one way to address the requirement that an arithmetic
|
2090
|
456 operation should not fail because of differing types of the operands.
|
|
457 Contagion is the idea that less precise operands are converted to the
|
|
458 more precise type, and then the operation is performed. While changing
|
|
459 precision is a delicate issue, contagion is so useful that XEmacs
|
|
460 performs it automatically.
|
2028
|
461
|
|
462 In XEmacs, the following rules of contagion are used:
|
|
463
|
|
464 @c #### this probably wants names for each rule
|
|
465 @enumerate
|
|
466 @item
|
2090
|
467 If an expression mixes an integral type with a ratio, then the usual
|
|
468 rules of rational arithmetic apply. (If the result of the expression
|
|
469 happens to be an integer, it will be canonicalized to integer.)
|
2028
|
470
|
|
471 @item
|
|
472 If an expression mixes a rational type (fixnum, bignum, or ratio) with a
|
|
473 float, the rational operand is converted to a float and the operation
|
|
474 performed if the result would fit in a float, otherwise both operands
|
|
475 are promoted to bigfloat, and the operation performed.
|
|
476
|
|
477 @item
|
|
478 If an expression mixes any other type with a bigfloat, the other operand
|
|
479 is converted to bigfloat and the operation performed.
|
|
480
|
|
481 @item
|
2090
|
482 If bigfloats of different precision are mixed, all are converted to the
|
|
483 @emph{highest} precision, and the operation performed.
|
2028
|
484 @end enumerate
|
|
485
|
|
486 Note that there are no rules to canonicalize floats or bigfloats. This
|
|
487 might seem surprising, but in both cases information will be lost. Any
|
|
488 floating point representation is implicitly approximate. A conversion
|
|
489 to a rational type, even if it seems exact, loses this information.
|
|
490 More subtly, demoting a bigfloat to a smaller bigfloat or to a float
|
|
491 would lose information about the precision of the result, and thus some
|
|
492 information about the accuracy. Thus floating point numbers are always
|
|
493 already in canonical form.
|
|
494
|
|
495 Of course the programmer can explicitly request canonicalization, or
|
|
496 more coercion to another type. Coercion uses the Common Lisp
|
|
497 compatibility function @code{coerce} from the @file{cl-extra.el}
|
|
498 library. A number can be explicitly converted to canonical form
|
|
499 according to the above rules using
|
|
500
|
|
501 @defun canonicalize-number number
|
|
502 Return the canonical form of @var{number}.
|
|
503 @end defun
|
|
504
|
2090
|
505 However, if we've done our job properly, this is always a no-op. That
|
|
506 is, if you find a number in un-canonicalized form, please report it as a
|
|
507 bug.
|
|
508
|
2028
|
509
|
|
510 @node Compatibility Issues
|
|
511 @subsection Compatibility Issues
|
|
512
|
|
513 @emph{Surgeon General's Warning}: The automatic conversions cannot be
|
|
514 disabled at runtime. Old functions will not produce ratios unless there
|
|
515 is a ratio operand, so there should be few surprises with type
|
|
516 conflicts (the contagion rules are quite natural for Lisp programmers
|
|
517 used to the behavior of integers and floats in pre-21.5.18 XEmacsen),
|
|
518 but they can't be ruled out. Also, if you work with extremely large
|
|
519 numbers, your machine may arbitrarily decide to hand you an unpleasant
|
|
520 surprise rather than a bignum.
|
|
521
|
|
522 User-visible changes in behavior include (in probable order of annoyance)
|
|
523
|
|
524 @itemize
|
|
525 @item
|
|
526 Arithmetic can cause a segfault, depending on your MP library.
|
|
527
|
|
528 GMP by default allocates temporaries on the stack. If you run out of
|
|
529 stack space, you're dead; there is no way that we know of to reliably
|
|
530 detect this condition, because @samp{alloca} is typically implemented to
|
|
531 be @emph{fast} rather than robust. If you just need a little more
|
|
532 oomph, use a bigger stack (@emph{e.g.}, the @file{ulimit -s} command in
|
|
533 bash(1)). If you want robustness at the cost of speed, configure GMP
|
|
534 with @samp{--disable-alloca} and rebuild the GMP library.
|
|
535
|
|
536 We do not know whether BSD MP uses @samp{alloca} or not. Please send
|
|
537 any information you have as a bug report (@kbd{M-x report-xemacs-bug
|
|
538 @key{RET}}), which will give us platform information. (We do know that
|
|
539 BSD MP implementations vary across vendors, but how much, we do not know
|
|
540 yet.)
|
|
541
|
|
542 @item
|
|
543 Terminology is not Common-Lisp-conforming. For example, ``integer'' for
|
|
544 Emacs Lisp means what Common Lisp calls ``fixnum''. This issue is being
|
|
545 investigated, but the use of ``integer'' for fixnum is pervasive and may
|
|
546 cause backward-compatibility and GNU-Emacs-compatibility problems.
|
|
547 There are similar issues for floating point numbers. Since Emacs Lisp
|
|
548 has not had a ratio type before, there should be no problems there.
|
|
549
|
|
550 @item
|
|
551 An atom with ratio read syntax now returns a number, not a symbol.
|
|
552
|
|
553 @item
|
|
554 Many operations that used to cause a range error now succeed, with
|
|
555 intermediate results and return values coerced to bignums as needed.
|
|
556
|
|
557 @item
|
|
558 The @samp{%u} format conversion will now give an error if its argument
|
|
559 is negative. (Without MP, it prints a number which Lisp can't read.)
|
|
560 @end itemize
|
|
561
|
|
562 This is not a compatibility issue in the sense of specification, but
|
|
563 careless programmers who have taken advantage of the immediate
|
|
564 representation for numbers and written @code{(eq x y)} are in for a
|
|
565 surprise. This doesn't work with bignums, even if both arguments are
|
|
566 bignums! Arbitrary precision obviously requires consing new objects
|
|
567 because the objects are ``large'' and of variable size, and the
|
|
568 definition of @samp{eq} does not permit different objects to compare as
|
|
569 equal. Instead of @code{eq}, use @code{eql}, in which numbers of the
|
|
570 same type which have equal values compare equal, or @code{=}, which does
|
|
571 any necessary type coercions before comparing for equality
|
|
572 @ref{Comparison of Numbers}.
|
|
573
|
|
574
|
428
|
575 @node Predicates on Numbers
|
|
576 @section Type Predicates for Numbers
|
|
577
|
|
578 The functions in this section test whether the argument is a number or
|
2090
|
579 whether it is a certain sort of number. The functions which test for
|
|
580 type can take any type of Lisp object as argument (the more general
|
|
581 predicates would not be of much use otherwise). However, the
|
|
582 @code{zerop} predicate requires a number as its argument, and the
|
|
583 @code{evenp}, and @code{oddp} predicates require integers as their
|
|
584 arguments. See also @code{integer-or-marker-p},
|
|
585 @code{integer-char-or-marker-p}, @code{number-or-marker-p} and
|
|
586 @code{number-char-or-marker-p}, in @ref{Predicates on Markers}.
|
428
|
587
|
2090
|
588 @defun numberp object
|
|
589 This predicate tests whether its argument is a number (either integer or
|
|
590 floating point), and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
591 @end defun
|
428
|
592
|
2090
|
593 @defun realp object
|
|
594 @cindex numbers
|
|
595 The @code{realp} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is a
|
|
596 rational or floating point number, and returns @code{t} if so,
|
|
597 @code{nil} otherwise. Currently equivalent to @code{numberp}.
|
|
598 @end defun
|
|
599
|
|
600 @defun zerop number
|
|
601 This predicate tests whether its argument is zero, and returns @code{t}
|
|
602 if so, @code{nil} otherwise. The argument must be a number.
|
|
603
|
|
604 These two forms are equivalent: @code{(zerop x)} @equiv{} @code{(= x 0)}.
|
428
|
605 @end defun
|
|
606
|
|
607 @defun integerp object
|
|
608 This predicate tests whether its argument is an integer, and returns
|
|
609 @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
610 @end defun
|
|
611
|
2090
|
612 @defun oddp integer
|
|
613 @cindex integers
|
|
614 The @code{oddp} predicate tests to see whether @var{integer} is odd, and
|
|
615 returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise. @var{integer} must be an
|
|
616 integer.
|
|
617 @end defun
|
|
618
|
|
619 @defun evenp integer
|
|
620 @cindex integers
|
|
621 The @code{evenp} predicate tests to see whether @var{integer} is even,
|
|
622 and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise. @var{integer} must be
|
|
623 an integer.
|
428
|
624 @end defun
|
|
625
|
|
626 @defun natnump object
|
|
627 @cindex natural numbers
|
|
628 The @code{natnump} predicate (whose name comes from the phrase
|
|
629 ``natural-number-p'') tests to see whether its argument is a nonnegative
|
|
630 integer, and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise. 0 is
|
|
631 considered non-negative.
|
|
632 @end defun
|
|
633
|
2090
|
634 @defun fixnump object
|
|
635 @cindex integers
|
|
636 The @code{} predicate tests to see whether its argument is an integer
|
|
637 represented as a fixnum, and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil}
|
|
638 otherwise.
|
|
639 @end defun
|
|
640
|
|
641 @defun bignump object
|
|
642 @cindex integers
|
|
643 The @code{bignump} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is an
|
|
644 integer represented as a bignum, and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil}
|
|
645 otherwise.
|
|
646 @end defun
|
|
647
|
|
648 @defun rationalp object
|
|
649 @cindex numbers
|
|
650 The @code{rationalp} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is a
|
|
651 rational number, and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
652 @end defun
|
428
|
653
|
2090
|
654 @defun ratiop object
|
|
655 @cindex ratios
|
|
656 The @code{ratiop} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is a
|
|
657 number represented as a ratio, and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil}
|
|
658 otherwise.
|
|
659 @end defun
|
|
660
|
|
661 @defun floatingp object
|
|
662 @cindex floats
|
|
663 The @code{floatingp} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is a
|
|
664 floating point number represented as a float or a bigfloat, and returns
|
|
665 @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
428
|
666 @end defun
|
|
667
|
2090
|
668 @defun floatp object
|
|
669 @cindex floats
|
|
670 This predicate tests whether its argument is a floating point
|
|
671 number and returns @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
672
|
|
673 @code{floatp} does not exist in Emacs versions 18 and earlier. If the
|
|
674 bignum extension is present, it returns @code{nil} for a bigfloat.
|
|
675 @end defun
|
|
676
|
|
677 @defun bigfloatp object
|
|
678 @cindex floats
|
|
679 The @code{bigfloatp} predicate tests to see whether @var{object} is an
|
2091
|
680 floating point number represented as a bigfloat, and returns @code{t} if
|
|
681 so, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
2090
|
682 @end defun
|
|
683
|
|
684
|
428
|
685 @node Comparison of Numbers
|
|
686 @section Comparison of Numbers
|
|
687 @cindex number equality
|
|
688
|
|
689 To test numbers for numerical equality, you should normally use
|
2090
|
690 @code{=}, not @code{eq}. There can be many distinct floating point,
|
|
691 bignum, and ratio number objects with the same numeric value. If you
|
|
692 use @code{eq} to compare them, then you test whether two values are the
|
|
693 same @emph{object}. By contrast, @code{=} compares only the numeric
|
|
694 values of the objects.
|
428
|
695
|
2028
|
696 In versions before 21.5.18, each integer value had a unique Lisp
|
|
697 object in XEmacs Lisp. Therefore, @code{eq} was equivalent to @code{=}
|
|
698 where integers are concerned. Even with the introduction of bignums, it
|
|
699 is sometimes convenient to use @code{eq} for comparing an unknown value
|
|
700 with an integer, because @code{eq} does not report an error if the
|
|
701 unknown value is not a number---it accepts arguments of any type. By
|
|
702 contrast, @code{=} signals an error if the arguments are not numbers or
|
|
703 markers. However, it is a good idea to use @code{=} if you can, even
|
|
704 for comparing exact values, because two bignums or ratios with the same
|
|
705 value will often not be the same object.
|
428
|
706
|
2090
|
707 On the other hand, some functions, such as the string- and
|
|
708 buffer-searching functions, will return an integer on success, but
|
|
709 something else (usually @code{nil}) on failure. If it is known what the
|
|
710 numerical subtype (float, bigfloat, or exact) of the returned object
|
|
711 will be if it is a number, then the predicate @code{eql} can be used for
|
|
712 comparison without signaling an error on some expected return values.
|
|
713 Because of canonicalization, @code{eql} can be used to compare a fixnum
|
|
714 value to something that might be a ratio; if the potential ratio value
|
|
715 is representable as a fixnum, it will be canonicalized to fixnum before
|
2091
|
716 comparing. However, although floats and bigfloats are of different
|
|
717 types for the purpose of comparisons via @code{eql}, two bigfloats of
|
|
718 different @emph{precision} that are @code{=} will always be @code{eql}.
|
2090
|
719
|
|
720 @example
|
|
721 (eql 2 (string-match "ere" "there"))
|
|
722 @result{} t
|
|
723
|
|
724 (eql 2 (string-match "ere" "three"))
|
|
725 @result{} nil
|
|
726
|
|
727 (eql 2 2.0)
|
|
728 @result{} nil
|
|
729
|
|
730 (= 2 (string-match "ere" "there"))
|
|
731 @result{} t
|
|
732
|
|
733 (= 2 (string-match "ere" "three"))
|
|
734 @error{} Wrong type argument: number-char-or-marker-p, nil
|
|
735
|
|
736 (= 2 2.0)
|
|
737 @result{} t
|
|
738 @end example
|
|
739
|
|
740
|
|
741
|
428
|
742 There is another wrinkle: because floating point arithmetic is not
|
|
743 exact, it is often a bad idea to check for equality of two floating
|
|
744 point values. Usually it is better to test for approximate equality.
|
|
745 Here's a function to do this:
|
|
746
|
|
747 @example
|
|
748 (defconst fuzz-factor 1.0e-6)
|
|
749 (defun approx-equal (x y)
|
|
750 (or (and (= x 0) (= y 0))
|
|
751 (< (/ (abs (- x y))
|
|
752 (max (abs x) (abs y)))
|
|
753 fuzz-factor)))
|
|
754 @end example
|
|
755
|
|
756 @cindex CL note---integers vrs @code{eq}
|
|
757 @quotation
|
|
758 @b{Common Lisp note:} Comparing numbers in Common Lisp always requires
|
|
759 @code{=} because Common Lisp implements multi-word integers, and two
|
|
760 distinct integer objects can have the same numeric value. XEmacs Lisp
|
|
761 can have just one integer object for any given value because it has a
|
|
762 limited range of integer values.
|
|
763 @end quotation
|
|
764
|
|
765 In addition to numbers, all of the following functions also accept
|
|
766 characters and markers as arguments, and treat them as their number
|
|
767 equivalents.
|
|
768
|
|
769 @defun = number &rest more-numbers
|
|
770 This function returns @code{t} if all of its arguments are numerically
|
|
771 equal, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
772
|
|
773 @example
|
|
774 (= 5)
|
|
775 @result{} t
|
|
776 (= 5 6)
|
|
777 @result{} nil
|
|
778 (= 5 5.0)
|
|
779 @result{} t
|
|
780 (= 5 5 6)
|
|
781 @result{} nil
|
|
782 @end example
|
|
783 @end defun
|
|
784
|
|
785 @defun /= number &rest more-numbers
|
|
786 This function returns @code{t} if no two arguments are numerically
|
|
787 equal, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
788
|
|
789 @example
|
|
790 (/= 5 6)
|
|
791 @result{} t
|
|
792 (/= 5 5 6)
|
|
793 @result{} nil
|
|
794 (/= 5 6 1)
|
|
795 @result{} t
|
|
796 @end example
|
|
797 @end defun
|
|
798
|
|
799 @defun < number &rest more-numbers
|
|
800 This function returns @code{t} if the sequence of its arguments is
|
|
801 monotonically increasing, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
802
|
|
803 @example
|
|
804 (< 5 6)
|
|
805 @result{} t
|
|
806 (< 5 6 6)
|
|
807 @result{} nil
|
|
808 (< 5 6 7)
|
|
809 @result{} t
|
|
810 @end example
|
|
811 @end defun
|
|
812
|
|
813 @defun <= number &rest more-numbers
|
|
814 This function returns @code{t} if the sequence of its arguments is
|
|
815 monotonically nondecreasing, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
816
|
|
817 @example
|
|
818 (<= 5 6)
|
|
819 @result{} t
|
|
820 (<= 5 6 6)
|
|
821 @result{} t
|
|
822 (<= 5 6 5)
|
|
823 @result{} nil
|
|
824 @end example
|
|
825 @end defun
|
|
826
|
|
827 @defun > number &rest more-numbers
|
|
828 This function returns @code{t} if the sequence of its arguments is
|
|
829 monotonically decreasing, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
830 @end defun
|
|
831
|
|
832 @defun >= number &rest more-numbers
|
|
833 This function returns @code{t} if the sequence of its arguments is
|
|
834 monotonically nonincreasing, @code{nil} otherwise.
|
|
835 @end defun
|
|
836
|
|
837 @defun max number &rest more-numbers
|
|
838 This function returns the largest of its arguments.
|
|
839
|
|
840 @example
|
|
841 (max 20)
|
|
842 @result{} 20
|
|
843 (max 1 2.5)
|
|
844 @result{} 2.5
|
|
845 (max 1 3 2.5)
|
|
846 @result{} 3
|
|
847 @end example
|
|
848 @end defun
|
|
849
|
|
850 @defun min number &rest more-numbers
|
|
851 This function returns the smallest of its arguments.
|
|
852
|
|
853 @example
|
|
854 (min -4 1)
|
|
855 @result{} -4
|
|
856 @end example
|
|
857 @end defun
|
|
858
|
|
859 @node Numeric Conversions
|
|
860 @section Numeric Conversions
|
|
861 @cindex rounding in conversions
|
|
862
|
|
863 To convert an integer to floating point, use the function @code{float}.
|
|
864
|
|
865 @defun float number
|
|
866 This returns @var{number} converted to floating point.
|
|
867 If @var{number} is already a floating point number, @code{float} returns
|
|
868 it unchanged.
|
|
869 @end defun
|
|
870
|
|
871 There are four functions to convert floating point numbers to integers;
|
|
872 they differ in how they round. These functions accept integer arguments
|
|
873 also, and return such arguments unchanged.
|
|
874
|
|
875 @defun truncate number
|
|
876 This returns @var{number}, converted to an integer by rounding towards
|
|
877 zero.
|
|
878 @end defun
|
|
879
|
|
880 @defun floor number &optional divisor
|
|
881 This returns @var{number}, converted to an integer by rounding downward
|
|
882 (towards negative infinity).
|
|
883
|
|
884 If @var{divisor} is specified, @var{number} is divided by @var{divisor}
|
|
885 before the floor is taken; this is the division operation that
|
|
886 corresponds to @code{mod}. An @code{arith-error} results if
|
|
887 @var{divisor} is 0.
|
|
888 @end defun
|
|
889
|
|
890 @defun ceiling number
|
|
891 This returns @var{number}, converted to an integer by rounding upward
|
|
892 (towards positive infinity).
|
|
893 @end defun
|
|
894
|
|
895 @defun round number
|
|
896 This returns @var{number}, converted to an integer by rounding towards the
|
|
897 nearest integer. Rounding a value equidistant between two integers
|
|
898 may choose the integer closer to zero, or it may prefer an even integer,
|
|
899 depending on your machine.
|
|
900 @end defun
|
|
901
|
|
902 @node Arithmetic Operations
|
|
903 @section Arithmetic Operations
|
|
904
|
|
905 XEmacs Lisp provides the traditional four arithmetic operations:
|
|
906 addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Remainder and modulus
|
|
907 functions supplement the division functions. The functions to
|
|
908 add or subtract 1 are provided because they are traditional in Lisp and
|
|
909 commonly used.
|
|
910
|
|
911 All of these functions except @code{%} return a floating point value
|
|
912 if any argument is floating.
|
|
913
|
|
914 It is important to note that in XEmacs Lisp, arithmetic functions
|
|
915 do not check for overflow. Thus @code{(1+ 134217727)} may evaluate to
|
|
916 @minus{}134217728, depending on your hardware.
|
|
917
|
444
|
918 @defun 1+ number
|
|
919 This function returns @var{number} plus one. @var{number} may be a
|
|
920 number, character or marker. Markers and characters are converted to
|
|
921 integers.
|
|
922
|
428
|
923 For example,
|
|
924
|
|
925 @example
|
|
926 (setq foo 4)
|
|
927 @result{} 4
|
|
928 (1+ foo)
|
|
929 @result{} 5
|
|
930 @end example
|
|
931
|
|
932 This function is not analogous to the C operator @code{++}---it does not
|
|
933 increment a variable. It just computes a sum. Thus, if we continue,
|
|
934
|
|
935 @example
|
|
936 foo
|
|
937 @result{} 4
|
|
938 @end example
|
|
939
|
|
940 If you want to increment the variable, you must use @code{setq},
|
|
941 like this:
|
|
942
|
|
943 @example
|
|
944 (setq foo (1+ foo))
|
|
945 @result{} 5
|
|
946 @end example
|
|
947
|
|
948 Now that the @code{cl} package is always available from lisp code, a
|
|
949 more convenient and natural way to increment a variable is
|
|
950 @w{@code{(incf foo)}}.
|
|
951 @end defun
|
|
952
|
444
|
953 @defun 1- number
|
|
954 This function returns @var{number} minus one. @var{number} may be a
|
|
955 number, character or marker. Markers and characters are converted to
|
|
956 integers.
|
428
|
957 @end defun
|
|
958
|
|
959 @defun abs number
|
|
960 This returns the absolute value of @var{number}.
|
|
961 @end defun
|
|
962
|
444
|
963 @defun + &rest numbers
|
428
|
964 This function adds its arguments together. When given no arguments,
|
|
965 @code{+} returns 0.
|
|
966
|
444
|
967 If any of the arguments are characters or markers, they are first
|
|
968 converted to integers.
|
|
969
|
428
|
970 @example
|
|
971 (+)
|
|
972 @result{} 0
|
|
973 (+ 1)
|
|
974 @result{} 1
|
|
975 (+ 1 2 3 4)
|
|
976 @result{} 10
|
|
977 @end example
|
|
978 @end defun
|
|
979
|
444
|
980 @defun - &optional number &rest other-numbers
|
428
|
981 The @code{-} function serves two purposes: negation and subtraction.
|
|
982 When @code{-} has a single argument, the value is the negative of the
|
|
983 argument. When there are multiple arguments, @code{-} subtracts each of
|
444
|
984 the @var{other-numbers} from @var{number}, cumulatively. If there are
|
|
985 no arguments, an error is signaled.
|
|
986
|
|
987 If any of the arguments are characters or markers, they are first
|
|
988 converted to integers.
|
428
|
989
|
|
990 @example
|
|
991 (- 10 1 2 3 4)
|
|
992 @result{} 0
|
|
993 (- 10)
|
|
994 @result{} -10
|
|
995 (-)
|
|
996 @result{} 0
|
|
997 @end example
|
|
998 @end defun
|
|
999
|
444
|
1000 @defun * &rest numbers
|
428
|
1001 This function multiplies its arguments together, and returns the
|
|
1002 product. When given no arguments, @code{*} returns 1.
|
|
1003
|
444
|
1004 If any of the arguments are characters or markers, they are first
|
|
1005 converted to integers.
|
|
1006
|
428
|
1007 @example
|
|
1008 (*)
|
|
1009 @result{} 1
|
|
1010 (* 1)
|
|
1011 @result{} 1
|
|
1012 (* 1 2 3 4)
|
|
1013 @result{} 24
|
|
1014 @end example
|
|
1015 @end defun
|
|
1016
|
444
|
1017 @defun / dividend &rest divisors
|
|
1018 The @code{/} function serves two purposes: inversion and division. When
|
|
1019 @code{/} has a single argument, the value is the inverse of the
|
|
1020 argument. When there are multiple arguments, @code{/} divides
|
|
1021 @var{dividend} by each of the @var{divisors}, cumulatively, returning
|
|
1022 the quotient. If there are no arguments, an error is signaled.
|
428
|
1023
|
444
|
1024 If none of the arguments are floats, then the result is an integer.
|
428
|
1025 This means the result has to be rounded. On most machines, the result
|
|
1026 is rounded towards zero after each division, but some machines may round
|
|
1027 differently with negative arguments. This is because the Lisp function
|
|
1028 @code{/} is implemented using the C division operator, which also
|
|
1029 permits machine-dependent rounding. As a practical matter, all known
|
|
1030 machines round in the standard fashion.
|
|
1031
|
444
|
1032 If any of the arguments are characters or markers, they are first
|
|
1033 converted to integers.
|
|
1034
|
428
|
1035 @cindex @code{arith-error} in division
|
|
1036 If you divide by 0, an @code{arith-error} error is signaled.
|
|
1037 (@xref{Errors}.)
|
|
1038
|
|
1039 @example
|
|
1040 @group
|
|
1041 (/ 6 2)
|
|
1042 @result{} 3
|
|
1043 @end group
|
|
1044 (/ 5 2)
|
|
1045 @result{} 2
|
|
1046 (/ 25 3 2)
|
|
1047 @result{} 4
|
444
|
1048 (/ 3.0)
|
|
1049 @result{} 0.3333333333333333
|
428
|
1050 (/ -17 6)
|
|
1051 @result{} -2
|
|
1052 @end example
|
|
1053
|
|
1054 The result of @code{(/ -17 6)} could in principle be -3 on some
|
|
1055 machines.
|
|
1056 @end defun
|
|
1057
|
|
1058 @defun % dividend divisor
|
|
1059 @cindex remainder
|
|
1060 This function returns the integer remainder after division of @var{dividend}
|
|
1061 by @var{divisor}. The arguments must be integers or markers.
|
|
1062
|
|
1063 For negative arguments, the remainder is in principle machine-dependent
|
|
1064 since the quotient is; but in practice, all known machines behave alike.
|
|
1065
|
|
1066 An @code{arith-error} results if @var{divisor} is 0.
|
|
1067
|
|
1068 @example
|
|
1069 (% 9 4)
|
|
1070 @result{} 1
|
|
1071 (% -9 4)
|
|
1072 @result{} -1
|
|
1073 (% 9 -4)
|
|
1074 @result{} 1
|
|
1075 (% -9 -4)
|
|
1076 @result{} -1
|
|
1077 @end example
|
|
1078
|
|
1079 For any two integers @var{dividend} and @var{divisor},
|
|
1080
|
|
1081 @example
|
|
1082 @group
|
|
1083 (+ (% @var{dividend} @var{divisor})
|
|
1084 (* (/ @var{dividend} @var{divisor}) @var{divisor}))
|
|
1085 @end group
|
|
1086 @end example
|
|
1087
|
|
1088 @noindent
|
|
1089 always equals @var{dividend}.
|
|
1090 @end defun
|
|
1091
|
|
1092 @defun mod dividend divisor
|
|
1093 @cindex modulus
|
|
1094 This function returns the value of @var{dividend} modulo @var{divisor};
|
|
1095 in other words, the remainder after division of @var{dividend}
|
|
1096 by @var{divisor}, but with the same sign as @var{divisor}.
|
|
1097 The arguments must be numbers or markers.
|
|
1098
|
|
1099 Unlike @code{%}, @code{mod} returns a well-defined result for negative
|
|
1100 arguments. It also permits floating point arguments; it rounds the
|
|
1101 quotient downward (towards minus infinity) to an integer, and uses that
|
|
1102 quotient to compute the remainder.
|
|
1103
|
|
1104 An @code{arith-error} results if @var{divisor} is 0.
|
|
1105
|
|
1106 @example
|
|
1107 @group
|
|
1108 (mod 9 4)
|
|
1109 @result{} 1
|
|
1110 @end group
|
|
1111 @group
|
|
1112 (mod -9 4)
|
|
1113 @result{} 3
|
|
1114 @end group
|
|
1115 @group
|
|
1116 (mod 9 -4)
|
|
1117 @result{} -3
|
|
1118 @end group
|
|
1119 @group
|
|
1120 (mod -9 -4)
|
|
1121 @result{} -1
|
|
1122 @end group
|
|
1123 @group
|
|
1124 (mod 5.5 2.5)
|
|
1125 @result{} .5
|
|
1126 @end group
|
|
1127 @end example
|
|
1128
|
|
1129 For any two numbers @var{dividend} and @var{divisor},
|
|
1130
|
|
1131 @example
|
|
1132 @group
|
|
1133 (+ (mod @var{dividend} @var{divisor})
|
|
1134 (* (floor @var{dividend} @var{divisor}) @var{divisor}))
|
|
1135 @end group
|
|
1136 @end example
|
|
1137
|
|
1138 @noindent
|
|
1139 always equals @var{dividend}, subject to rounding error if either
|
|
1140 argument is floating point. For @code{floor}, see @ref{Numeric
|
|
1141 Conversions}.
|
|
1142 @end defun
|
|
1143
|
|
1144 @node Rounding Operations
|
|
1145 @section Rounding Operations
|
|
1146 @cindex rounding without conversion
|
|
1147
|
|
1148 The functions @code{ffloor}, @code{fceiling}, @code{fround} and
|
|
1149 @code{ftruncate} take a floating point argument and return a floating
|
|
1150 point result whose value is a nearby integer. @code{ffloor} returns the
|
|
1151 nearest integer below; @code{fceiling}, the nearest integer above;
|
|
1152 @code{ftruncate}, the nearest integer in the direction towards zero;
|
|
1153 @code{fround}, the nearest integer.
|
|
1154
|
444
|
1155 @defun ffloor number
|
|
1156 This function rounds @var{number} to the next lower integral value, and
|
428
|
1157 returns that value as a floating point number.
|
|
1158 @end defun
|
|
1159
|
444
|
1160 @defun fceiling number
|
|
1161 This function rounds @var{number} to the next higher integral value, and
|
428
|
1162 returns that value as a floating point number.
|
|
1163 @end defun
|
|
1164
|
444
|
1165 @defun ftruncate number
|
|
1166 This function rounds @var{number} towards zero to an integral value, and
|
428
|
1167 returns that value as a floating point number.
|
|
1168 @end defun
|
|
1169
|
444
|
1170 @defun fround number
|
|
1171 This function rounds @var{number} to the nearest integral value,
|
428
|
1172 and returns that value as a floating point number.
|
|
1173 @end defun
|
|
1174
|
|
1175 @node Bitwise Operations
|
|
1176 @section Bitwise Operations on Integers
|
|
1177
|
|
1178 In a computer, an integer is represented as a binary number, a
|
|
1179 sequence of @dfn{bits} (digits which are either zero or one). A bitwise
|
|
1180 operation acts on the individual bits of such a sequence. For example,
|
|
1181 @dfn{shifting} moves the whole sequence left or right one or more places,
|
|
1182 reproducing the same pattern ``moved over''.
|
|
1183
|
|
1184 The bitwise operations in XEmacs Lisp apply only to integers.
|
|
1185
|
|
1186 @defun lsh integer1 count
|
|
1187 @cindex logical shift
|
|
1188 @code{lsh}, which is an abbreviation for @dfn{logical shift}, shifts the
|
|
1189 bits in @var{integer1} to the left @var{count} places, or to the right
|
|
1190 if @var{count} is negative, bringing zeros into the vacated bits. If
|
|
1191 @var{count} is negative, @code{lsh} shifts zeros into the leftmost
|
|
1192 (most-significant) bit, producing a positive result even if
|
|
1193 @var{integer1} is negative. Contrast this with @code{ash}, below.
|
|
1194
|
|
1195 Here are two examples of @code{lsh}, shifting a pattern of bits one
|
|
1196 place to the left. We show only the low-order eight bits of the binary
|
|
1197 pattern; the rest are all zero.
|
|
1198
|
|
1199 @example
|
|
1200 @group
|
|
1201 (lsh 5 1)
|
|
1202 @result{} 10
|
|
1203 ;; @r{Decimal 5 becomes decimal 10.}
|
|
1204 00000101 @result{} 00001010
|
|
1205
|
|
1206 (lsh 7 1)
|
|
1207 @result{} 14
|
|
1208 ;; @r{Decimal 7 becomes decimal 14.}
|
|
1209 00000111 @result{} 00001110
|
|
1210 @end group
|
|
1211 @end example
|
|
1212
|
|
1213 @noindent
|
|
1214 As the examples illustrate, shifting the pattern of bits one place to
|
|
1215 the left produces a number that is twice the value of the previous
|
|
1216 number.
|
|
1217
|
|
1218 Shifting a pattern of bits two places to the left produces results
|
|
1219 like this (with 8-bit binary numbers):
|
|
1220
|
|
1221 @example
|
|
1222 @group
|
|
1223 (lsh 3 2)
|
|
1224 @result{} 12
|
|
1225 ;; @r{Decimal 3 becomes decimal 12.}
|
444
|
1226 00000011 @result{} 00001100
|
428
|
1227 @end group
|
|
1228 @end example
|
|
1229
|
|
1230 On the other hand, shifting one place to the right looks like this:
|
|
1231
|
|
1232 @example
|
|
1233 @group
|
|
1234 (lsh 6 -1)
|
|
1235 @result{} 3
|
|
1236 ;; @r{Decimal 6 becomes decimal 3.}
|
444
|
1237 00000110 @result{} 00000011
|
428
|
1238 @end group
|
|
1239
|
|
1240 @group
|
|
1241 (lsh 5 -1)
|
|
1242 @result{} 2
|
|
1243 ;; @r{Decimal 5 becomes decimal 2.}
|
444
|
1244 00000101 @result{} 00000010
|
428
|
1245 @end group
|
|
1246 @end example
|
|
1247
|
|
1248 @noindent
|
|
1249 As the example illustrates, shifting one place to the right divides the
|
|
1250 value of a positive integer by two, rounding downward.
|
|
1251
|
|
1252 The function @code{lsh}, like all XEmacs Lisp arithmetic functions, does
|
|
1253 not check for overflow, so shifting left can discard significant bits
|
|
1254 and change the sign of the number. For example, left shifting
|
|
1255 134,217,727 produces @minus{}2 on a 28-bit machine:
|
|
1256
|
|
1257 @example
|
|
1258 (lsh 134217727 1) ; @r{left shift}
|
|
1259 @result{} -2
|
|
1260 @end example
|
|
1261
|
|
1262 In binary, in the 28-bit implementation, the argument looks like this:
|
|
1263
|
|
1264 @example
|
|
1265 @group
|
|
1266 ;; @r{Decimal 134,217,727}
|
444
|
1267 0111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111
|
428
|
1268 @end group
|
|
1269 @end example
|
|
1270
|
|
1271 @noindent
|
|
1272 which becomes the following when left shifted:
|
|
1273
|
|
1274 @example
|
|
1275 @group
|
|
1276 ;; @r{Decimal @minus{}2}
|
444
|
1277 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1110
|
428
|
1278 @end group
|
|
1279 @end example
|
|
1280 @end defun
|
|
1281
|
|
1282 @defun ash integer1 count
|
|
1283 @cindex arithmetic shift
|
|
1284 @code{ash} (@dfn{arithmetic shift}) shifts the bits in @var{integer1}
|
|
1285 to the left @var{count} places, or to the right if @var{count}
|
|
1286 is negative.
|
|
1287
|
|
1288 @code{ash} gives the same results as @code{lsh} except when
|
|
1289 @var{integer1} and @var{count} are both negative. In that case,
|
|
1290 @code{ash} puts ones in the empty bit positions on the left, while
|
|
1291 @code{lsh} puts zeros in those bit positions.
|
|
1292
|
|
1293 Thus, with @code{ash}, shifting the pattern of bits one place to the right
|
|
1294 looks like this:
|
|
1295
|
|
1296 @example
|
|
1297 @group
|
444
|
1298 (ash -6 -1) @result{} -3
|
428
|
1299 ;; @r{Decimal @minus{}6 becomes decimal @minus{}3.}
|
|
1300 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1010
|
444
|
1301 @result{}
|
428
|
1302 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1101
|
|
1303 @end group
|
|
1304 @end example
|
|
1305
|
|
1306 In contrast, shifting the pattern of bits one place to the right with
|
|
1307 @code{lsh} looks like this:
|
|
1308
|
|
1309 @example
|
|
1310 @group
|
|
1311 (lsh -6 -1) @result{} 134217725
|
|
1312 ;; @r{Decimal @minus{}6 becomes decimal 134,217,725.}
|
|
1313 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1010
|
444
|
1314 @result{}
|
428
|
1315 0111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1101
|
|
1316 @end group
|
|
1317 @end example
|
|
1318
|
|
1319 Here are other examples:
|
|
1320
|
|
1321 @c !!! Check if lined up in smallbook format! XDVI shows problem
|
|
1322 @c with smallbook but not with regular book! --rjc 16mar92
|
|
1323 @smallexample
|
|
1324 @group
|
|
1325 ; @r{ 28-bit binary values}
|
|
1326
|
|
1327 (lsh 5 2) ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1328 @result{} 20 ; = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0001 0100}
|
|
1329 @end group
|
|
1330 @group
|
|
1331 (ash 5 2)
|
|
1332 @result{} 20
|
|
1333 (lsh -5 2) ; -5 = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1011}
|
|
1334 @result{} -20 ; = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1110 1100}
|
|
1335 (ash -5 2)
|
|
1336 @result{} -20
|
|
1337 @end group
|
|
1338 @group
|
|
1339 (lsh 5 -2) ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1340 @result{} 1 ; = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0001}
|
|
1341 @end group
|
|
1342 @group
|
|
1343 (ash 5 -2)
|
|
1344 @result{} 1
|
|
1345 @end group
|
|
1346 @group
|
|
1347 (lsh -5 -2) ; -5 = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1011}
|
|
1348 @result{} 4194302 ; = @r{0011 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1110}
|
|
1349 @end group
|
|
1350 @group
|
|
1351 (ash -5 -2) ; -5 = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1011}
|
|
1352 @result{} -2 ; = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1110}
|
|
1353 @end group
|
|
1354 @end smallexample
|
|
1355 @end defun
|
|
1356
|
|
1357 @defun logand &rest ints-or-markers
|
|
1358 @cindex logical and
|
|
1359 @cindex bitwise and
|
|
1360 This function returns the ``logical and'' of the arguments: the
|
|
1361 @var{n}th bit is set in the result if, and only if, the @var{n}th bit is
|
|
1362 set in all the arguments. (``Set'' means that the value of the bit is 1
|
|
1363 rather than 0.)
|
|
1364
|
|
1365 For example, using 4-bit binary numbers, the ``logical and'' of 13 and
|
|
1366 12 is 12: 1101 combined with 1100 produces 1100.
|
|
1367 In both the binary numbers, the leftmost two bits are set (i.e., they
|
|
1368 are 1's), so the leftmost two bits of the returned value are set.
|
|
1369 However, for the rightmost two bits, each is zero in at least one of
|
|
1370 the arguments, so the rightmost two bits of the returned value are 0's.
|
|
1371
|
|
1372 @noindent
|
|
1373 Therefore,
|
|
1374
|
|
1375 @example
|
|
1376 @group
|
|
1377 (logand 13 12)
|
|
1378 @result{} 12
|
|
1379 @end group
|
|
1380 @end example
|
|
1381
|
|
1382 If @code{logand} is not passed any argument, it returns a value of
|
|
1383 @minus{}1. This number is an identity element for @code{logand}
|
|
1384 because its binary representation consists entirely of ones. If
|
|
1385 @code{logand} is passed just one argument, it returns that argument.
|
|
1386
|
|
1387 @smallexample
|
|
1388 @group
|
|
1389 ; @r{ 28-bit binary values}
|
|
1390
|
|
1391 (logand 14 13) ; 14 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1110}
|
|
1392 ; 13 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1101}
|
|
1393 @result{} 12 ; 12 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1100}
|
|
1394 @end group
|
|
1395
|
|
1396 @group
|
|
1397 (logand 14 13 4) ; 14 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1110}
|
|
1398 ; 13 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1101}
|
|
1399 ; 4 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0100}
|
|
1400 @result{} 4 ; 4 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0100}
|
|
1401 @end group
|
|
1402
|
|
1403 @group
|
|
1404 (logand)
|
|
1405 @result{} -1 ; -1 = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111}
|
|
1406 @end group
|
|
1407 @end smallexample
|
|
1408 @end defun
|
|
1409
|
|
1410 @defun logior &rest ints-or-markers
|
|
1411 @cindex logical inclusive or
|
|
1412 @cindex bitwise or
|
|
1413 This function returns the ``inclusive or'' of its arguments: the @var{n}th bit
|
|
1414 is set in the result if, and only if, the @var{n}th bit is set in at least
|
|
1415 one of the arguments. If there are no arguments, the result is zero,
|
|
1416 which is an identity element for this operation. If @code{logior} is
|
|
1417 passed just one argument, it returns that argument.
|
|
1418
|
|
1419 @smallexample
|
|
1420 @group
|
|
1421 ; @r{ 28-bit binary values}
|
|
1422
|
|
1423 (logior 12 5) ; 12 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1100}
|
|
1424 ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1425 @result{} 13 ; 13 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1101}
|
|
1426 @end group
|
|
1427
|
|
1428 @group
|
|
1429 (logior 12 5 7) ; 12 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1100}
|
|
1430 ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1431 ; 7 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0111}
|
|
1432 @result{} 15 ; 15 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1111}
|
|
1433 @end group
|
|
1434 @end smallexample
|
|
1435 @end defun
|
|
1436
|
|
1437 @defun logxor &rest ints-or-markers
|
|
1438 @cindex bitwise exclusive or
|
|
1439 @cindex logical exclusive or
|
|
1440 This function returns the ``exclusive or'' of its arguments: the
|
|
1441 @var{n}th bit is set in the result if, and only if, the @var{n}th bit is
|
|
1442 set in an odd number of the arguments. If there are no arguments, the
|
|
1443 result is 0, which is an identity element for this operation. If
|
|
1444 @code{logxor} is passed just one argument, it returns that argument.
|
|
1445
|
|
1446 @smallexample
|
|
1447 @group
|
|
1448 ; @r{ 28-bit binary values}
|
|
1449
|
|
1450 (logxor 12 5) ; 12 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1100}
|
|
1451 ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1452 @result{} 9 ; 9 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1001}
|
|
1453 @end group
|
|
1454
|
|
1455 @group
|
|
1456 (logxor 12 5 7) ; 12 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1100}
|
|
1457 ; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1458 ; 7 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0111}
|
|
1459 @result{} 14 ; 14 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 1110}
|
|
1460 @end group
|
|
1461 @end smallexample
|
|
1462 @end defun
|
|
1463
|
|
1464 @defun lognot integer
|
|
1465 @cindex logical not
|
|
1466 @cindex bitwise not
|
|
1467 This function returns the logical complement of its argument: the @var{n}th
|
|
1468 bit is one in the result if, and only if, the @var{n}th bit is zero in
|
|
1469 @var{integer}, and vice-versa.
|
|
1470
|
|
1471 @example
|
444
|
1472 (lognot 5)
|
428
|
1473 @result{} -6
|
|
1474 ;; 5 = @r{0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0101}
|
|
1475 ;; @r{becomes}
|
|
1476 ;; -6 = @r{1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1010}
|
|
1477 @end example
|
|
1478 @end defun
|
|
1479
|
|
1480 @node Math Functions
|
|
1481 @section Standard Mathematical Functions
|
|
1482 @cindex transcendental functions
|
|
1483 @cindex mathematical functions
|
|
1484
|
|
1485 These mathematical functions are available if floating point is
|
|
1486 supported (which is the normal state of affairs). They allow integers
|
|
1487 as well as floating point numbers as arguments.
|
|
1488
|
444
|
1489 @defun sin number
|
|
1490 @defunx cos number
|
|
1491 @defunx tan number
|
428
|
1492 These are the ordinary trigonometric functions, with argument measured
|
|
1493 in radians.
|
|
1494 @end defun
|
|
1495
|
444
|
1496 @defun asin number
|
|
1497 The value of @code{(asin @var{number})} is a number between @minus{}pi/2
|
|
1498 and pi/2 (inclusive) whose sine is @var{number}; if, however, @var{number}
|
428
|
1499 is out of range (outside [-1, 1]), then the result is a NaN.
|
|
1500 @end defun
|
|
1501
|
444
|
1502 @defun acos number
|
|
1503 The value of @code{(acos @var{number})} is a number between 0 and pi
|
|
1504 (inclusive) whose cosine is @var{number}; if, however, @var{number}
|
428
|
1505 is out of range (outside [-1, 1]), then the result is a NaN.
|
|
1506 @end defun
|
|
1507
|
444
|
1508 @defun atan number &optional number2
|
|
1509 The value of @code{(atan @var{number})} is a number between @minus{}pi/2
|
|
1510 and pi/2 (exclusive) whose tangent is @var{number}.
|
|
1511
|
|
1512 If optional argument @var{number2} is supplied, the function returns
|
|
1513 @code{atan2(@var{number},@var{number2})}.
|
428
|
1514 @end defun
|
|
1515
|
444
|
1516 @defun sinh number
|
|
1517 @defunx cosh number
|
|
1518 @defunx tanh number
|
428
|
1519 These are the ordinary hyperbolic trigonometric functions.
|
|
1520 @end defun
|
|
1521
|
444
|
1522 @defun asinh number
|
|
1523 @defunx acosh number
|
|
1524 @defunx atanh number
|
428
|
1525 These are the inverse hyperbolic trigonometric functions.
|
|
1526 @end defun
|
|
1527
|
444
|
1528 @defun exp number
|
428
|
1529 This is the exponential function; it returns @i{e} to the power
|
444
|
1530 @var{number}. @i{e} is a fundamental mathematical constant also called the
|
428
|
1531 base of natural logarithms.
|
|
1532 @end defun
|
|
1533
|
444
|
1534 @defun log number &optional base
|
|
1535 This function returns the logarithm of @var{number}, with base @var{base}.
|
1738
|
1536 If you don't specify @var{base}, the base @code{e} is used. If @var{number}
|
428
|
1537 is negative, the result is a NaN.
|
|
1538 @end defun
|
|
1539
|
444
|
1540 @defun log10 number
|
|
1541 This function returns the logarithm of @var{number}, with base 10. If
|
|
1542 @var{number} is negative, the result is a NaN. @code{(log10 @var{x})}
|
428
|
1543 @equiv{} @code{(log @var{x} 10)}, at least approximately.
|
|
1544 @end defun
|
|
1545
|
|
1546 @defun expt x y
|
|
1547 This function returns @var{x} raised to power @var{y}. If both
|
|
1548 arguments are integers and @var{y} is positive, the result is an
|
|
1549 integer; in this case, it is truncated to fit the range of possible
|
|
1550 integer values.
|
|
1551 @end defun
|
|
1552
|
444
|
1553 @defun sqrt number
|
|
1554 This returns the square root of @var{number}. If @var{number} is negative,
|
428
|
1555 the value is a NaN.
|
|
1556 @end defun
|
|
1557
|
444
|
1558 @defun cube-root number
|
|
1559 This returns the cube root of @var{number}.
|
428
|
1560 @end defun
|
|
1561
|
|
1562 @node Random Numbers
|
|
1563 @section Random Numbers
|
|
1564 @cindex random numbers
|
|
1565
|
|
1566 A deterministic computer program cannot generate true random numbers.
|
|
1567 For most purposes, @dfn{pseudo-random numbers} suffice. A series of
|
|
1568 pseudo-random numbers is generated in a deterministic fashion. The
|
|
1569 numbers are not truly random, but they have certain properties that
|
|
1570 mimic a random series. For example, all possible values occur equally
|
|
1571 often in a pseudo-random series.
|
|
1572
|
|
1573 In XEmacs, pseudo-random numbers are generated from a ``seed'' number.
|
|
1574 Starting from any given seed, the @code{random} function always
|
|
1575 generates the same sequence of numbers. XEmacs always starts with the
|
|
1576 same seed value, so the sequence of values of @code{random} is actually
|
|
1577 the same in each XEmacs run! For example, in one operating system, the
|
|
1578 first call to @code{(random)} after you start XEmacs always returns
|
|
1579 -1457731, and the second one always returns -7692030. This
|
|
1580 repeatability is helpful for debugging.
|
|
1581
|
2090
|
1582 If you want reasonably unpredictable random numbers, execute
|
|
1583 @code{(random t)}. This chooses a new seed based on the current time of
|
|
1584 day and on XEmacs's process @sc{id} number. (This is not
|
|
1585 cryptographically strong, it's just hard for a @emph{human} to
|
|
1586 anticipate.)
|
428
|
1587
|
|
1588 @defun random &optional limit
|
|
1589 This function returns a pseudo-random integer. Repeated calls return a
|
|
1590 series of pseudo-random integers.
|
|
1591
|
|
1592 If @var{limit} is a positive integer, the value is chosen to be
|
|
1593 nonnegative and less than @var{limit}.
|
|
1594
|
|
1595 If @var{limit} is @code{t}, it means to choose a new seed based on the
|
|
1596 current time of day and on XEmacs's process @sc{id} number.
|
|
1597 @c "XEmacs'" is incorrect usage!
|
2090
|
1598 @end defun
|
428
|
1599
|
2090
|
1600 The range of random is implementation-dependent. On any machine, the
|
|
1601 result of @code{(random)} is an arbitrary fixnum, so on 32-bit
|
|
1602 architectures it is normally in the range -2^30 (inclusive) to +2^30
|
|
1603 (exclusive). With the optional integer argument @var{limit}, the result
|
|
1604 is in the range 0 (inclusive) to @var{limit} (exclusive). Note this is
|
|
1605 regardless of the presence of the bignum extension.
|
|
1606
|