1 /* floating point to accurate string
3 Copyright (C) 2010-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
6 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
7 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
8 (at your option) any later version.
10 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
11 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
12 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
13 GNU General Public License for more details.
15 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
16 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
18 /* Written by Paul Eggert. */
20 /* This code can misbehave on some buggy or older platforms, when
21 operating on arguments on floating types other than 'double', or
22 when given unusual combinations of options. Gnulib's
23 snprintf-posix module works around many of these problems.
25 This code relies on sprintf, strtod, etc. operating accurately;
26 otherwise, the resulting strings could be inaccurate or too long. */
38 # define FLOAT long double
39 # define FLOAT_DIG LDBL_DIG
40 # define FLOAT_MIN LDBL_MIN
41 # define FLOAT_PREC_BOUND _GL_LDBL_PREC_BOUND
42 # define FTOASTR ldtoastr
44 # define STRTOF strtold
48 # define FLOAT_DIG DBL_DIG
49 # define FLOAT_MIN DBL_MIN
50 # define FLOAT_PREC_BOUND _GL_DBL_PREC_BOUND
51 # define FTOASTR dtoastr
55 # define FLOAT_DIG FLT_DIG
56 # define FLOAT_MIN FLT_MIN
57 # define FLOAT_PREC_BOUND _GL_FLT_PREC_BOUND
58 # define FTOASTR ftoastr
60 # define STRTOF strtof
64 /* On pre-C99 hosts, approximate strtof and strtold with strtod. This
65 may generate one or two extra digits, but that's better than not
68 # define STRTOF strtod
71 /* On hosts where it's not known that snprintf works, use sprintf to
72 implement the subset needed here. Typically BUFSIZE is big enough
73 and there's little or no performance hit. */
76 # define snprintf ftoastr_snprintf
78 ftoastr_snprintf (char *buf
, size_t bufsize
, char const *format
,
79 int width
, int prec
, FLOAT x
)
81 char width_0_buffer
[LENGTH
== 1 ? FLT_BUFSIZE_BOUND
82 : LENGTH
== 2 ? DBL_BUFSIZE_BOUND
83 : LDBL_BUFSIZE_BOUND
];
85 if (bufsize
< sizeof width_0_buffer
)
87 n
= sprintf (width_0_buffer
, format
, 0, prec
, x
);
94 n
= sprintf (buf
, format
, width
, prec
, x
);
100 FTOASTR (char *buf
, size_t bufsize
, int flags
, int width
, FLOAT x
)
102 /* The following method is simple but slow.
103 For ideas about speeding things up, please see:
105 Florian Loitsch, Printing floating-point numbers quickly and accurately
106 with integers. ACM SIGPLAN notices 46, 6 (June 2010), 233-243
107 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1809028.1806623>; also see the
108 2010-03-21 draft <http://florian.loitsch.com/tmp/article.pdf>. */
110 char format
[sizeof "%-+ 0*.*Lg"];
111 FLOAT abs_x
= x
< 0 ? -x
: x
;
117 /* Support flags that generate output parsable by strtof. */
118 *p
= '-'; p
+= (flags
& FTOASTR_LEFT_JUSTIFY
) != 0;
119 *p
= '+'; p
+= (flags
& FTOASTR_ALWAYS_SIGNED
) != 0;
120 *p
= ' '; p
+= (flags
& FTOASTR_SPACE_POSITIVE
) != 0;
121 *p
= '0'; p
+= (flags
& FTOASTR_ZERO_PAD
) != 0;
126 *p
= 'L'; p
+= 2 < LENGTH
;
127 *p
++ = flags
& FTOASTR_UPPER_E
? 'G' : 'g';
130 for (prec
= abs_x
< FLOAT_MIN
? 1 : FLOAT_DIG
; ; prec
++)
132 int n
= snprintf (buf
, bufsize
, format
, width
, prec
, x
);
134 || FLOAT_PREC_BOUND
<= prec
135 || (n
< bufsize
&& STRTOF (buf
, NULL
) == x
))