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author | Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com> | 2009-12-30 12:12:23 (GMT) |
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committer | Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com> | 2009-12-30 12:12:23 (GMT) |
commit | 99d652ef6602995208278eaecebfe1e2f813f5a0 (patch) | |
tree | d6dfd0b0787cd23b76e6a9950c55e286f0f6ac6f /Objects | |
parent | 569e61f35196cb765eb9940f75b27bb765e73073 (diff) | |
download | cpython-99d652ef6602995208278eaecebfe1e2f813f5a0.zip cpython-99d652ef6602995208278eaecebfe1e2f813f5a0.tar.gz cpython-99d652ef6602995208278eaecebfe1e2f813f5a0.tar.bz2 |
Issue #7534: Fix handling of nans, infinities, and negative zero in **
operator, on IEEE 754 platforms. Thanks Marcos Donolo for original patch.
Diffstat (limited to 'Objects')
-rw-r--r-- | Objects/floatobject.c | 97 |
1 files changed, 74 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/Objects/floatobject.c b/Objects/floatobject.c index 01e5825..d93d9f9 100644 --- a/Objects/floatobject.c +++ b/Objects/floatobject.c @@ -791,10 +791,15 @@ float_floor_div(PyObject *v, PyObject *w) return r; } +/* determine whether x is an odd integer or not; assumes that + x is not an infinity or nan. */ +#define DOUBLE_IS_ODD_INTEGER(x) (fmod(fabs(x), 2.0) == 1.0) + static PyObject * float_pow(PyObject *v, PyObject *w, PyObject *z) { double iv, iw, ix; + int negate_result = 0; if ((PyObject *)z != Py_None) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "pow() 3rd argument not " @@ -806,20 +811,56 @@ float_pow(PyObject *v, PyObject *w, PyObject *z) CONVERT_TO_DOUBLE(w, iw); /* Sort out special cases here instead of relying on pow() */ - if (iw == 0) { /* v**0 is 1, even 0**0 */ + if (iw == 0) { /* v**0 is 1, even 0**0 */ return PyFloat_FromDouble(1.0); } - if (iv == 0.0) { /* 0**w is error if w<0, else 1 */ + if (Py_IS_NAN(iv)) { /* nan**w = nan, unless w == 0 */ + return PyFloat_FromDouble(iv); + } + if (Py_IS_NAN(iw)) { /* v**nan = nan, unless v == 1; 1**nan = 1 */ + return PyFloat_FromDouble(iv == 1.0 ? 1.0 : iw); + } + if (Py_IS_INFINITY(iw)) { + /* v**inf is: 0.0 if abs(v) < 1; 1.0 if abs(v) == 1; inf if + * abs(v) > 1 (including case where v infinite) + * + * v**-inf is: inf if abs(v) < 1; 1.0 if abs(v) == 1; 0.0 if + * abs(v) > 1 (including case where v infinite) + */ + iv = fabs(iv); + if (iv == 1.0) + return PyFloat_FromDouble(1.0); + else if ((iw > 0.0) == (iv > 1.0)) + return PyFloat_FromDouble(fabs(iw)); /* return inf */ + else + return PyFloat_FromDouble(0.0); + } + if (Py_IS_INFINITY(iv)) { + /* (+-inf)**w is: inf for w positive, 0 for w negative; in + * both cases, we need to add the appropriate sign if w is + * an odd integer. + */ + int iw_is_odd = DOUBLE_IS_ODD_INTEGER(iw); + if (iw > 0.0) + return PyFloat_FromDouble(iw_is_odd ? iv : fabs(iv)); + else + return PyFloat_FromDouble(iw_is_odd ? + copysign(0.0, iv) : 0.0); + } + if (iv == 0.0) { /* 0**w is: 0 for w positive, 1 for w zero + (already dealt with above), and an error + if w is negative. */ + int iw_is_odd = DOUBLE_IS_ODD_INTEGER(iw); if (iw < 0.0) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ZeroDivisionError, - "0.0 cannot be raised to a negative power"); + "0.0 cannot be raised to a " + "negative power"); return NULL; } - return PyFloat_FromDouble(0.0); - } - if (iv == 1.0) { /* 1**w is 1, even 1**inf and 1**nan */ - return PyFloat_FromDouble(1.0); + /* use correct sign if iw is odd */ + return PyFloat_FromDouble(iw_is_odd ? iv : 0.0); } + if (iv < 0.0) { /* Whether this is an error is a mess, and bumps into libm * bugs so we have to figure it out ourselves. @@ -829,33 +870,41 @@ float_pow(PyObject *v, PyObject *w, PyObject *z) "cannot be raised to a fractional power"); return NULL; } - /* iw is an exact integer, albeit perhaps a very large one. + /* iw is an exact integer, albeit perhaps a very large + * one. Replace iv by its absolute value and remember + * to negate the pow result if iw is odd. + */ + iv = -iv; + negate_result = DOUBLE_IS_ODD_INTEGER(iw); + } + + if (iv == 1.0) { /* 1**w is 1, even 1**inf and 1**nan */ + /* (-1) ** large_integer also ends up here. Here's an + * extract from the comments for the previous + * implementation explaining why this special case is + * necessary: + * * -1 raised to an exact integer should never be exceptional. * Alas, some libms (chiefly glibc as of early 2003) return * NaN and set EDOM on pow(-1, large_int) if the int doesn't * happen to be representable in a *C* integer. That's a - * bug; we let that slide in math.pow() (which currently - * reflects all platform accidents), but not for Python's **. - */ - if (iv == -1.0 && Py_IS_FINITE(iw)) { - /* Return 1 if iw is even, -1 if iw is odd; there's - * no guarantee that any C integral type is big - * enough to hold iw, so we have to check this - * indirectly. - */ - ix = floor(iw * 0.5) * 2.0; - return PyFloat_FromDouble(ix == iw ? 1.0 : -1.0); - } - /* Else iv != -1.0, and overflow or underflow are possible. - * Unless we're to write pow() ourselves, we have to trust - * the platform to do this correctly. + * bug. */ + return PyFloat_FromDouble(negate_result ? -1.0 : 1.0); } + + /* Now iv and iw are finite, iw is nonzero, and iv is + * positive and not equal to 1.0. We finally allow + * the platform pow to step in and do the rest. + */ errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("pow", return NULL) ix = pow(iv, iw); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(ix) Py_ADJUST_ERANGE1(ix); + if (negate_result) + ix = -ix; + if (errno != 0) { /* We don't expect any errno value other than ERANGE, but * the range of libm bugs appears unbounded. @@ -867,6 +916,8 @@ float_pow(PyObject *v, PyObject *w, PyObject *z) return PyFloat_FromDouble(ix); } +#undef DOUBLE_IS_ODD_INTEGER + static PyObject * float_neg(PyFloatObject *v) { |