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Diffstat (limited to 'Include/pymath.h')
-rw-r--r-- | Include/pymath.h | 182 |
1 files changed, 182 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Include/pymath.h b/Include/pymath.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a3735c2 --- /dev/null +++ b/Include/pymath.h @@ -0,0 +1,182 @@ +#ifndef Py_PYMATH_H +#define Py_PYMATH_H + +#include "pyconfig.h" /* include for defines */ + +#ifdef HAVE_STDINT_H +#include <stdint.h> +#endif + +/************************************************************************** +Symbols and macros to supply platform-independent interfaces to mathematical +functions and constants +**************************************************************************/ + +/* Python provides implementations for copysign, acosh, asinh, atanh, + * log1p and hypot in Python/pymath.c just in case your math library doesn't + * provide the functions. + * + *Note: PC/pyconfig.h defines copysign as _copysign + */ +#ifndef HAVE_COPYSIGN +extern double copysign(doube, double); +#endif + +#ifndef HAVE_ACOSH +extern double acosh(double); +#endif + +#ifndef HAVE_ASINH +extern double asinh(double); +#endif + +#ifndef HAVE_ATANH +extern double atanh(double); +#endif + +#ifndef HAVE_LOG1P +extern double log1p(double); +#endif + +#ifndef HAVE_HYPOT +extern double hypot(double, double); +#endif + +/* extra declarations */ +#ifndef _MSC_VER +#ifndef __STDC__ +extern double fmod (double, double); +extern double frexp (double, int *); +extern double ldexp (double, int); +extern double modf (double, double *); +extern double pow(double, double); +#endif /* __STDC__ */ +#endif /* _MSC_VER */ + +#ifdef _OSF_SOURCE +/* OSF1 5.1 doesn't make these available with XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED defined */ +extern int finite(double); +extern double copysign(double, double); +#endif + +/* High precision defintion of pi and e (Euler) + * The values are taken from libc6's math.h. + */ +#ifndef Py_MATH_PIl +#define Py_MATH_PIl 3.1415926535897932384626433832795029L +#endif +#ifndef Py_MATH_PI +#define Py_MATH_PI 3.14159265358979323846 +#endif + +#ifndef Py_MATH_El +#define Py_MATH_El 2.7182818284590452353602874713526625L +#endif + +#ifndef Py_MATH_E +#define Py_MATH_E 2.7182818284590452354 +#endif + +/* Py_IS_NAN(X) + * Return 1 if float or double arg is a NaN, else 0. + * Caution: + * X is evaluated more than once. + * This may not work on all platforms. Each platform has *some* + * way to spell this, though -- override in pyconfig.h if you have + * a platform where it doesn't work. + * Note: PC/pyconfig.h defines Py_IS_NAN as _isnan + */ +#ifndef Py_IS_NAN +#ifdef HAVE_ISNAN +#define Py_IS_NAN(X) isnan(X) +#else +#define Py_IS_NAN(X) ((X) != (X)) +#endif +#endif + +/* Py_IS_INFINITY(X) + * Return 1 if float or double arg is an infinity, else 0. + * Caution: + * X is evaluated more than once. + * This implementation may set the underflow flag if |X| is very small; + * it really can't be implemented correctly (& easily) before C99. + * Override in pyconfig.h if you have a better spelling on your platform. + * Note: PC/pyconfig.h defines Py_IS_INFINITY as _isinf + */ +#ifndef Py_IS_INFINITY +#ifdef HAVE_ISINF +#define Py_IS_INFINITY(X) isinf(X) +#else +#define Py_IS_INFINITY(X) ((X) && (X)*0.5 == (X)) +#endif +#endif + +/* Py_IS_FINITE(X) + * Return 1 if float or double arg is neither infinite nor NAN, else 0. + * Some compilers (e.g. VisualStudio) have intrisics for this, so a special + * macro for this particular test is useful + * Note: PC/pyconfig.h defines Py_IS_FINITE as _finite + */ +#ifndef Py_IS_FINITE +#ifdef HAVE_FINITE +#define Py_IS_FINITE(X) finite(X) +#else +#define Py_IS_FINITE(X) (!Py_IS_INFINITY(X) && !Py_IS_NAN(X)) +#endif +#endif + +/* HUGE_VAL is supposed to expand to a positive double infinity. Python + * uses Py_HUGE_VAL instead because some platforms are broken in this + * respect. We used to embed code in pyport.h to try to worm around that, + * but different platforms are broken in conflicting ways. If you're on + * a platform where HUGE_VAL is defined incorrectly, fiddle your Python + * config to #define Py_HUGE_VAL to something that works on your platform. + */ +#ifndef Py_HUGE_VAL +#define Py_HUGE_VAL HUGE_VAL +#endif + +/* Py_NAN + * A value that evaluates to a NaN. On IEEE 754 platforms INF*0 or + * INF/INF works. Define Py_NO_NAN in pyconfig.h if your platform + * doesn't support NaNs. + */ +#if !defined(Py_NAN) && !defined(Py_NO_NAN) +#define Py_NAN (Py_HUGE_VAL * 0.) +#endif + +/* Py_OVERFLOWED(X) + * Return 1 iff a libm function overflowed. Set errno to 0 before calling + * a libm function, and invoke this macro after, passing the function + * result. + * Caution: + * This isn't reliable. C99 no longer requires libm to set errno under + * any exceptional condition, but does require +- HUGE_VAL return + * values on overflow. A 754 box *probably* maps HUGE_VAL to a + * double infinity, and we're cool if that's so, unless the input + * was an infinity and an infinity is the expected result. A C89 + * system sets errno to ERANGE, so we check for that too. We're + * out of luck if a C99 754 box doesn't map HUGE_VAL to +Inf, or + * if the returned result is a NaN, or if a C89 box returns HUGE_VAL + * in non-overflow cases. + * X is evaluated more than once. + * Some platforms have better way to spell this, so expect some #ifdef'ery. + * + * OpenBSD uses 'isinf()' because a compiler bug on that platform causes + * the longer macro version to be mis-compiled. This isn't optimal, and + * should be removed once a newer compiler is available on that platform. + * The system that had the failure was running OpenBSD 3.2 on Intel, with + * gcc 2.95.3. + * + * According to Tim's checkin, the FreeBSD systems use isinf() to work + * around a FPE bug on that platform. + */ +#if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__OpenBSD__) +#define Py_OVERFLOWED(X) isinf(X) +#else +#define Py_OVERFLOWED(X) ((X) != 0.0 && (errno == ERANGE || \ + (X) == Py_HUGE_VAL || \ + (X) == -Py_HUGE_VAL)) +#endif + +#endif /* Py_PYMATH_H */ |