/* Math module -- standard C math library functions, pi and e */ /* Here are some comments from Tim Peters, extracted from the discussion attached to http://bugs.python.org/issue1640. They describe the general aims of the math module with respect to special values, IEEE-754 floating-point exceptions, and Python exceptions. These are the "spirit of 754" rules: 1. If the mathematical result is a real number, but of magnitude too large to approximate by a machine float, overflow is signaled and the result is an infinity (with the appropriate sign). 2. If the mathematical result is a real number, but of magnitude too small to approximate by a machine float, underflow is signaled and the result is a zero (with the appropriate sign). 3. At a singularity (a value x such that the limit of f(y) as y approaches x exists and is an infinity), "divide by zero" is signaled and the result is an infinity (with the appropriate sign). This is complicated a little by that the left-side and right-side limits may not be the same; e.g., 1/x approaches +inf or -inf as x approaches 0 from the positive or negative directions. In that specific case, the sign of the zero determines the result of 1/0. 4. At a point where a function has no defined result in the extended reals (i.e., the reals plus an infinity or two), invalid operation is signaled and a NaN is returned. And these are what Python has historically /tried/ to do (but not always successfully, as platform libm behavior varies a lot): For #1, raise OverflowError. For #2, return a zero (with the appropriate sign if that happens by accident ;-)). For #3 and #4, raise ValueError. It may have made sense to raise Python's ZeroDivisionError in #3, but historically that's only been raised for division by zero and mod by zero. */ /* In general, on an IEEE-754 platform the aim is to follow the C99 standard, including Annex 'F', whenever possible. Where the standard recommends raising the 'divide-by-zero' or 'invalid' floating-point exceptions, Python should raise a ValueError. Where the standard recommends raising 'overflow', Python should raise an OverflowError. In all other circumstances a value should be returned. */ #include "Python.h" #include "longintrepr.h" /* just for SHIFT */ #ifdef _OSF_SOURCE /* OSF1 5.1 doesn't make this available with XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED defined */ extern double copysign(double, double); #endif /* Call is_error when errno != 0, and where x is the result libm * returned. is_error will usually set up an exception and return * true (1), but may return false (0) without setting up an exception. */ static int is_error(double x) { int result = 1; /* presumption of guilt */ assert(errno); /* non-zero errno is a precondition for calling */ if (errno == EDOM) PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "math domain error"); else if (errno == ERANGE) { /* ANSI C generally requires libm functions to set ERANGE * on overflow, but also generally *allows* them to set * ERANGE on underflow too. There's no consistency about * the latter across platforms. * Alas, C99 never requires that errno be set. * Here we suppress the underflow errors (libm functions * should return a zero on underflow, and +- HUGE_VAL on * overflow, so testing the result for zero suffices to * distinguish the cases). */ if (x) PyErr_SetString(PyExc_OverflowError, "math range error"); else result = 0; } else /* Unexpected math error */ PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_ValueError); return result; } /* wrapper for atan2 that deals directly with special cases before delegating to the platform libm for the remaining cases. This is necessary to get consistent behaviour across platforms. Windows, FreeBSD and alpha Tru64 are amongst platforms that don't always follow C99. */ static double m_atan2(double y, double x) { if (Py_IS_NAN(x) || Py_IS_NAN(y)) return Py_NAN; if (Py_IS_INFINITY(y)) { if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) { if (copysign(1., x) == 1.) /* atan2(+-inf, +inf) == +-pi/4 */ return copysign(0.25*Py_MATH_PI, y); else /* atan2(+-inf, -inf) == +-pi*3/4 */ return copysign(0.75*Py_MATH_PI, y); } /* atan2(+-inf, x) == +-pi/2 for finite x */ return copysign(0.5*Py_MATH_PI, y); } if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x) || y == 0.) { if (copysign(1., x) == 1.) /* atan2(+-y, +inf) = atan2(+-0, +x) = +-0. */ return copysign(0., y); else /* atan2(+-y, -inf) = atan2(+-0., -x) = +-pi. */ return copysign(Py_MATH_PI, y); } return atan2(y, x); } /* math_1 is used to wrap a libm function f that takes a double arguments and returns a double. The error reporting follows these rules, which are designed to do the right thing on C89/C99 platforms and IEEE 754/non IEEE 754 platforms. - a NaN result from non-NaN inputs causes ValueError to be raised - an infinite result from finite inputs causes OverflowError to be raised if can_overflow is 1, or raises ValueError if can_overflow is 0. - if the result is finite and errno == EDOM then ValueError is raised - if the result is finite and nonzero and errno == ERANGE then OverflowError is raised The last rule is used to catch overflow on platforms which follow C89 but for which HUGE_VAL is not an infinity. For the majority of one-argument functions these rules are enough to ensure that Python's functions behave as specified in 'Annex F' of the C99 standard, with the 'invalid' and 'divide-by-zero' floating-point exceptions mapping to Python's ValueError and the 'overflow' floating-point exception mapping to OverflowError. math_1 only works for functions that don't have singularities *and* the possibility of overflow; fortunately, that covers everything we care about right now. */ static PyObject * math_1(PyObject *arg, double (*func) (double), int can_overflow) { double x, r; x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_1", return 0); r = (*func)(x); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); if (Py_IS_NAN(r)) { if (!Py_IS_NAN(x)) errno = EDOM; else errno = 0; } else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(r)) { if (Py_IS_FINITE(x)) errno = can_overflow ? ERANGE : EDOM; else errno = 0; } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; else return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } /* math_2 is used to wrap a libm function f that takes two double arguments and returns a double. The error reporting follows these rules, which are designed to do the right thing on C89/C99 platforms and IEEE 754/non IEEE 754 platforms. - a NaN result from non-NaN inputs causes ValueError to be raised - an infinite result from finite inputs causes OverflowError to be raised. - if the result is finite and errno == EDOM then ValueError is raised - if the result is finite and nonzero and errno == ERANGE then OverflowError is raised The last rule is used to catch overflow on platforms which follow C89 but for which HUGE_VAL is not an infinity. For most two-argument functions (copysign, fmod, hypot, atan2) these rules are enough to ensure that Python's functions behave as specified in 'Annex F' of the C99 standard, with the 'invalid' and 'divide-by-zero' floating-point exceptions mapping to Python's ValueError and the 'overflow' floating-point exception mapping to OverflowError. */ static PyObject * math_2(PyObject *args, double (*func) (double, double), char *funcname) { PyObject *ox, *oy; double x, y, r; if (! PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, funcname, 2, 2, &ox, &oy)) return NULL; x = PyFloat_AsDouble(ox); y = PyFloat_AsDouble(oy); if ((x == -1.0 || y == -1.0) && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_2", return 0); r = (*func)(x, y); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); if (Py_IS_NAN(r)) { if (!Py_IS_NAN(x) && !Py_IS_NAN(y)) errno = EDOM; else errno = 0; } else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(r)) { if (Py_IS_FINITE(x) && Py_IS_FINITE(y)) errno = ERANGE; else errno = 0; } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; else return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } #define FUNC1(funcname, func, can_overflow, docstring) \ static PyObject * math_##funcname(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { \ return math_1(args, func, can_overflow); \ }\ PyDoc_STRVAR(math_##funcname##_doc, docstring); #define FUNC2(funcname, func, docstring) \ static PyObject * math_##funcname(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { \ return math_2(args, func, #funcname); \ }\ PyDoc_STRVAR(math_##funcname##_doc, docstring); FUNC1(acos, acos, 0, "acos(x)\n\nReturn the arc cosine (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC1(acosh, acosh, 0, "acosh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic arc cosine (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC1(asin, asin, 0, "asin(x)\n\nReturn the arc sine (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC1(asinh, asinh, 0, "asinh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic arc sine (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC1(atan, atan, 0, "atan(x)\n\nReturn the arc tangent (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC2(atan2, m_atan2, "atan2(y, x)\n\nReturn the arc tangent (measured in radians) of y/x.\n" "Unlike atan(y/x), the signs of both x and y are considered.") FUNC1(atanh, atanh, 0, "atanh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic arc tangent (measured in radians) of x.") FUNC1(ceil, ceil, 0, "ceil(x)\n\nReturn the ceiling of x as a float.\n" "This is the smallest integral value >= x.") FUNC2(copysign, copysign, "copysign(x,y)\n\nReturn x with the sign of y.") FUNC1(cos, cos, 0, "cos(x)\n\nReturn the cosine of x (measured in radians).") FUNC1(cosh, cosh, 1, "cosh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic cosine of x.") FUNC1(exp, exp, 1, "exp(x)\n\nReturn e raised to the power of x.") FUNC1(fabs, fabs, 0, "fabs(x)\n\nReturn the absolute value of the float x.") FUNC1(floor, floor, 0, "floor(x)\n\nReturn the floor of x as a float.\n" "This is the largest integral value <= x.") FUNC1(log1p, log1p, 1, "log1p(x)\n\nReturn the natural logarithm of 1+x (base e).\n\ The result is computed in a way which is accurate for x near zero.") FUNC1(sin, sin, 0, "sin(x)\n\nReturn the sine of x (measured in radians).") FUNC1(sinh, sinh, 1, "sinh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic sine of x.") FUNC1(sqrt, sqrt, 0, "sqrt(x)\n\nReturn the square root of x.") FUNC1(tan, tan, 0, "tan(x)\n\nReturn the tangent of x (measured in radians).") FUNC1(tanh, tanh, 0, "tanh(x)\n\nReturn the hyperbolic tangent of x.") /* Precision summation function as msum() by Raymond Hettinger in , enhanced with the exact partials sum and roundoff from Mark Dickinson's post at . See those links for more details, proofs and other references. Note 1: IEEE 754R floating point semantics are assumed, but the current implementation does not re-establish special value semantics across iterations (i.e. handling -Inf + Inf). Note 2: No provision is made for intermediate overflow handling; therefore, sum([1e+308, 1e-308, 1e+308]) returns result 1e+308 while sum([1e+308, 1e+308, 1e-308]) raises an OverflowError due to the overflow of the first partial sum. Note 3: Aggressively optimizing compilers can potentially eliminate the residual values needed for accurate summation. For instance, the statements "hi = x + y; lo = y - (hi - x);" could be mis-transformed to "hi = x + y; lo = 0.0;" which defeats the computation of residuals. Note 4: A similar implementation is in Modules/cmathmodule.c. Be sure to update both when making changes. Note 5: The signature of math.sum() differs from __builtin__.sum() because the start argument doesn't make sense in the context of accurate summation. Since the partials table is collapsed before returning a result, sum(seq2, start=sum(seq1)) may not equal the accurate result returned by sum(itertools.chain(seq1, seq2)). */ #define NUM_PARTIALS 32 /* initial partials array size, on stack */ /* Extend the partials array p[] by doubling its size. */ static int /* non-zero on error */ _sum_realloc(double **p_ptr, Py_ssize_t n, double *ps, Py_ssize_t *m_ptr) { void *v = NULL; Py_ssize_t m = *m_ptr; m += m; /* double */ if (n < m && m < (PY_SSIZE_T_MAX / sizeof(double))) { double *p = *p_ptr; if (p == ps) { v = PyMem_Malloc(sizeof(double) * m); if (v != NULL) memcpy(v, ps, sizeof(double) * n); } else v = PyMem_Realloc(p, sizeof(double) * m); } if (v == NULL) { /* size overflow or no memory */ PyErr_SetString(PyExc_MemoryError, "math sum partials"); return 1; } *p_ptr = (double*) v; *m_ptr = m; return 0; } /* Full precision summation of a sequence of floats. def msum(iterable): partials = [] # sorted, non-overlapping partial sums for x in iterable: i = 0 for y in partials: if abs(x) < abs(y): x, y = y, x hi = x + y lo = y - (hi - x) if lo: partials[i] = lo i += 1 x = hi partials[i:] = [x] return sum_exact(partials) Rounded x+y stored in hi with the roundoff stored in lo. Together hi+lo are exactly equal to x+y. The inner loop applies hi/lo summation to each partial so that the list of partial sums remains exact. Sum_exact() adds the partial sums exactly and correctly rounds the final result (using the round-half-to-even rule). The items in partials remain non-zero, non-special, non-overlapping and strictly increasing in magnitude, but possibly not all having the same sign. Depends on IEEE 754 arithmetic guarantees and half-even rounding. */ static PyObject* math_sum(PyObject *self, PyObject *seq) { PyObject *item, *iter, *sum = NULL; Py_ssize_t i, j, n = 0, m = NUM_PARTIALS; double x, y, hi, lo=0.0, ps[NUM_PARTIALS], *p = ps; iter = PyObject_GetIter(seq); if (iter == NULL) return NULL; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("sum", Py_DECREF(iter); return NULL) for(;;) { /* for x in iterable */ assert(0 <= n && n <= m); assert((m == NUM_PARTIALS && p == ps) || (m > NUM_PARTIALS && p != NULL)); item = PyIter_Next(iter); if (item == NULL) { if (PyErr_Occurred()) goto _sum_error; break; } x = PyFloat_AsDouble(item); Py_DECREF(item); if (PyErr_Occurred()) goto _sum_error; for (i = j = 0; j < n; j++) { /* for y in partials */ y = p[j]; hi = x + y; lo = fabs(x) < fabs(y) ? x - (hi - y) : y - (hi - x); if (lo != 0.0) p[i++] = lo; x = hi; } n = i; /* ps[i:] = [x] */ if (x != 0.0) { /* If non-finite, reset partials, effectively adding subsequent items without roundoff and yielding correct non-finite results, provided IEEE 754 rules are observed */ if (! Py_IS_FINITE(x)) n = 0; else if (n >= m && _sum_realloc(&p, n, ps, &m)) goto _sum_error; p[n++] = x; } } if (n > 0) { hi = p[--n]; if (Py_IS_FINITE(hi)) { /* sum_exact(ps, hi) from the top, stop when the sum becomes inexact. */ while (n > 0) { x = p[--n]; y = hi; hi = x + y; assert(fabs(x) < fabs(y)); lo = x - (hi - y); if (lo != 0.0) break; } /* Little dance to allow half-even rounding across multiple partials. Needed so that sum([1e-16, 1, 1e16]) will round-up to two instead of down to zero (the 1e16 makes the 1 slightly closer to two). */ if (n > 0 && ((lo < 0.0 && p[n-1] < 0.0) || (lo > 0.0 && p[n-1] > 0.0))) { y = lo * 2.0; x = hi + y; if (y == (x - hi)) hi = x; } } else { /* raise corresponding error */ errno = Py_IS_NAN(hi) ? EDOM : ERANGE; if (is_error(hi)) goto _sum_error; } } else /* default */ hi = 0.0; sum = PyFloat_FromDouble(hi); _sum_error: PyFPE_END_PROTECT(hi) Py_DECREF(iter); if (p != ps) PyMem_Free(p); return sum; } #undef NUM_PARTIALS PyDoc_STRVAR(math_sum_doc, "sum(iterable)\n\n\ Return an accurate floating point sum of values in the iterable.\n\ Assumes IEEE-754 floating point arithmetic."); static PyObject * math_trunc(PyObject *self, PyObject *number) { return PyObject_CallMethod(number, "__trunc__", NULL); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_trunc_doc, "trunc(x:Real) -> Integral\n" "\n" "Truncates x to the nearest Integral toward 0. Uses the __trunc__ magic method."); static PyObject * math_frexp(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { int i; double x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; /* deal with special cases directly, to sidestep platform differences */ if (Py_IS_NAN(x) || Py_IS_INFINITY(x) || !x) { i = 0; } else { PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_frexp", return 0); x = frexp(x, &i); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(x); } return Py_BuildValue("(di)", x, i); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_frexp_doc, "frexp(x)\n" "\n" "Return the mantissa and exponent of x, as pair (m, e).\n" "m is a float and e is an int, such that x = m * 2.**e.\n" "If x is 0, m and e are both 0. Else 0.5 <= abs(m) < 1.0."); static PyObject * math_ldexp(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { double x, r; PyObject *oexp; long exp; if (! PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "dO:ldexp", &x, &oexp)) return NULL; if (PyLong_Check(oexp)) { /* on overflow, replace exponent with either LONG_MAX or LONG_MIN, depending on the sign. */ exp = PyLong_AsLong(oexp); if (exp == -1 && PyErr_Occurred()) { if (PyErr_ExceptionMatches(PyExc_OverflowError)) { if (Py_SIZE(oexp) < 0) { exp = LONG_MIN; } else { exp = LONG_MAX; } PyErr_Clear(); } else { /* propagate any unexpected exception */ return NULL; } } } else if (PyInt_Check(oexp)) { exp = PyInt_AS_LONG(oexp); } else { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "Expected an int or long as second argument " "to ldexp."); return NULL; } if (x == 0. || !Py_IS_FINITE(x)) { /* NaNs, zeros and infinities are returned unchanged */ r = x; errno = 0; } else if (exp > INT_MAX) { /* overflow */ r = copysign(Py_HUGE_VAL, x); errno = ERANGE; } else if (exp < INT_MIN) { /* underflow to +-0 */ r = copysign(0., x); errno = 0; } else { errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_ldexp", return 0); r = ldexp(x, (int)exp); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); if (Py_IS_INFINITY(r)) errno = ERANGE; } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_ldexp_doc, "ldexp(x, i) -> x * (2**i)"); static PyObject * math_modf(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { double y, x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; /* some platforms don't do the right thing for NaNs and infinities, so we take care of special cases directly. */ if (!Py_IS_FINITE(x)) { if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) return Py_BuildValue("(dd)", copysign(0., x), x); else if (Py_IS_NAN(x)) return Py_BuildValue("(dd)", x, x); } errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_modf", return 0); x = modf(x, &y); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(x); return Py_BuildValue("(dd)", x, y); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_modf_doc, "modf(x)\n" "\n" "Return the fractional and integer parts of x. Both results carry the sign\n" "of x. The integer part is returned as a real."); /* A decent logarithm is easy to compute even for huge longs, but libm can't do that by itself -- loghelper can. func is log or log10, and name is "log" or "log10". Note that overflow isn't possible: a long can contain no more than INT_MAX * SHIFT bits, so has value certainly less than 2**(2**64 * 2**16) == 2**2**80, and log2 of that is 2**80, which is small enough to fit in an IEEE single. log and log10 are even smaller. */ static PyObject* loghelper(PyObject* arg, double (*func)(double), char *funcname) { /* If it is long, do it ourselves. */ if (PyLong_Check(arg)) { double x; int e; x = _PyLong_AsScaledDouble(arg, &e); if (x <= 0.0) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "math domain error"); return NULL; } /* Value is ~= x * 2**(e*PyLong_SHIFT), so the log ~= log(x) + log(2) * e * PyLong_SHIFT. CAUTION: e*PyLong_SHIFT may overflow using int arithmetic, so force use of double. */ x = func(x) + (e * (double)PyLong_SHIFT) * func(2.0); return PyFloat_FromDouble(x); } /* Else let libm handle it by itself. */ return math_1(arg, func, 0); } static PyObject * math_log(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *arg; PyObject *base = NULL; PyObject *num, *den; PyObject *ans; if (!PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "log", 1, 2, &arg, &base)) return NULL; num = loghelper(arg, log, "log"); if (num == NULL || base == NULL) return num; den = loghelper(base, log, "log"); if (den == NULL) { Py_DECREF(num); return NULL; } ans = PyNumber_Divide(num, den); Py_DECREF(num); Py_DECREF(den); return ans; } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_log_doc, "log(x[, base]) -> the logarithm of x to the given base.\n\ If the base not specified, returns the natural logarithm (base e) of x."); static PyObject * math_log10(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { return loghelper(arg, log10, "log10"); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_log10_doc, "log10(x) -> the base 10 logarithm of x."); static PyObject * math_fmod(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *ox, *oy; double r, x, y; if (! PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "fmod", 2, 2, &ox, &oy)) return NULL; x = PyFloat_AsDouble(ox); y = PyFloat_AsDouble(oy); if ((x == -1.0 || y == -1.0) && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; /* fmod(x, +/-Inf) returns x for finite x. */ if (Py_IS_INFINITY(y) && Py_IS_FINITE(x)) return PyFloat_FromDouble(x); errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_fmod", return 0); r = fmod(x, y); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); if (Py_IS_NAN(r)) { if (!Py_IS_NAN(x) && !Py_IS_NAN(y)) errno = EDOM; else errno = 0; } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; else return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_fmod_doc, "fmod(x,y)\n\nReturn fmod(x, y), according to platform C." " x % y may differ."); static PyObject * math_hypot(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *ox, *oy; double r, x, y; if (! PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "hypot", 2, 2, &ox, &oy)) return NULL; x = PyFloat_AsDouble(ox); y = PyFloat_AsDouble(oy); if ((x == -1.0 || y == -1.0) && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; /* hypot(x, +/-Inf) returns Inf, even if x is a NaN. */ if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) return PyFloat_FromDouble(fabs(x)); if (Py_IS_INFINITY(y)) return PyFloat_FromDouble(fabs(y)); errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_hypot", return 0); r = hypot(x, y); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); if (Py_IS_NAN(r)) { if (!Py_IS_NAN(x) && !Py_IS_NAN(y)) errno = EDOM; else errno = 0; } else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(r)) { if (Py_IS_FINITE(x) && Py_IS_FINITE(y)) errno = ERANGE; else errno = 0; } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; else return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_hypot_doc, "hypot(x,y)\n\nReturn the Euclidean distance, sqrt(x*x + y*y)."); /* pow can't use math_2, but needs its own wrapper: the problem is that an infinite result can arise either as a result of overflow (in which case OverflowError should be raised) or as a result of e.g. 0.**-5. (for which ValueError needs to be raised.) */ static PyObject * math_pow(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *ox, *oy; double r, x, y; int odd_y; if (! PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "pow", 2, 2, &ox, &oy)) return NULL; x = PyFloat_AsDouble(ox); y = PyFloat_AsDouble(oy); if ((x == -1.0 || y == -1.0) && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; /* deal directly with IEEE specials, to cope with problems on various platforms whose semantics don't exactly match C99 */ r = 0.; /* silence compiler warning */ if (!Py_IS_FINITE(x) || !Py_IS_FINITE(y)) { errno = 0; if (Py_IS_NAN(x)) r = y == 0. ? 1. : x; /* NaN**0 = 1 */ else if (Py_IS_NAN(y)) r = x == 1. ? 1. : y; /* 1**NaN = 1 */ else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) { odd_y = Py_IS_FINITE(y) && fmod(fabs(y), 2.0) == 1.0; if (y > 0.) r = odd_y ? x : fabs(x); else if (y == 0.) r = 1.; else /* y < 0. */ r = odd_y ? copysign(0., x) : 0.; } else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(y)) { if (fabs(x) == 1.0) r = 1.; else if (y > 0. && fabs(x) > 1.0) r = y; else if (y < 0. && fabs(x) < 1.0) { r = -y; /* result is +inf */ if (x == 0.) /* 0**-inf: divide-by-zero */ errno = EDOM; } else r = 0.; } } else { /* let libm handle finite**finite */ errno = 0; PyFPE_START_PROTECT("in math_pow", return 0); r = pow(x, y); PyFPE_END_PROTECT(r); /* a NaN result should arise only from (-ve)**(finite non-integer); in this case we want to raise ValueError. */ if (!Py_IS_FINITE(r)) { if (Py_IS_NAN(r)) { errno = EDOM; } /* an infinite result here arises either from: (A) (+/-0.)**negative (-> divide-by-zero) (B) overflow of x**y with x and y finite */ else if (Py_IS_INFINITY(r)) { if (x == 0.) errno = EDOM; else errno = ERANGE; } } } if (errno && is_error(r)) return NULL; else return PyFloat_FromDouble(r); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_pow_doc, "pow(x,y)\n\nReturn x**y (x to the power of y)."); static const double degToRad = Py_MATH_PI / 180.0; static const double radToDeg = 180.0 / Py_MATH_PI; static PyObject * math_degrees(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { double x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; return PyFloat_FromDouble(x * radToDeg); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_degrees_doc, "degrees(x) -> converts angle x from radians to degrees"); static PyObject * math_radians(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { double x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; return PyFloat_FromDouble(x * degToRad); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_radians_doc, "radians(x) -> converts angle x from degrees to radians"); static PyObject * math_isnan(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { double x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; return PyBool_FromLong((long)Py_IS_NAN(x)); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_isnan_doc, "isnan(x) -> bool\n\ Checks if float x is not a number (NaN)"); static PyObject * math_isinf(PyObject *self, PyObject *arg) { double x = PyFloat_AsDouble(arg); if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; return PyBool_FromLong((long)Py_IS_INFINITY(x)); } PyDoc_STRVAR(math_isinf_doc, "isinf(x) -> bool\n\ Checks if float x is infinite (positive or negative)"); static PyMethodDef math_methods[] = { {"acos", math_acos, METH_O, math_acos_doc}, {"acosh", math_acosh, METH_O, math_acosh_doc}, {"asin", math_asin, METH_O, math_asin_doc}, {"asinh", math_asinh, METH_O, math_asinh_doc}, {"atan", math_atan, METH_O, math_atan_doc}, {"atan2", math_atan2, METH_VARARGS, math_atan2_doc}, {"atanh", math_atanh, METH_O, math_atanh_doc}, {"ceil", math_ceil, METH_O, math_ceil_doc}, {"copysign", math_copysign, METH_VARARGS, math_copysign_doc}, {"cos", math_cos, METH_O, math_cos_doc}, {"cosh", math_cosh, METH_O, math_cosh_doc}, {"degrees", math_degrees, METH_O, math_degrees_doc}, {"exp", math_exp, METH_O, math_exp_doc}, {"fabs", math_fabs, METH_O, math_fabs_doc}, {"floor", math_floor, METH_O, math_floor_doc}, {"fmod", math_fmod, METH_VARARGS, math_fmod_doc}, {"frexp", math_frexp, METH_O, math_frexp_doc}, {"hypot", math_hypot, METH_VARARGS, math_hypot_doc}, {"isinf", math_isinf, METH_O, math_isinf_doc}, {"isnan", math_isnan, METH_O, math_isnan_doc}, {"ldexp", math_ldexp, METH_VARARGS, math_ldexp_doc}, {"log", math_log, METH_VARARGS, math_log_doc}, {"log1p", math_log1p, METH_O, math_log1p_doc}, {"log10", math_log10, METH_O, math_log10_doc}, {"modf", math_modf, METH_O, math_modf_doc}, {"pow", math_pow, METH_VARARGS, math_pow_doc}, {"radians", math_radians, METH_O, math_radians_doc}, {"sin", math_sin, METH_O, math_sin_doc}, {"sinh", math_sinh, METH_O, math_sinh_doc}, {"sqrt", math_sqrt, METH_O, math_sqrt_doc}, {"sum", math_sum, METH_O, math_sum_doc}, {"tan", math_tan, METH_O, math_tan_doc}, {"tanh", math_tanh, METH_O, math_tanh_doc}, {"trunc", math_trunc, METH_O, math_trunc_doc}, {NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */ }; PyDoc_STRVAR(module_doc, "This module is always available. It provides access to the\n" "mathematical functions defined by the C standard."); PyMODINIT_FUNC initmath(void) { PyObject *m; m = Py_InitModule3("math", math_methods, module_doc); if (m == NULL) goto finally; PyModule_AddObject(m, "pi", PyFloat_FromDouble(Py_MATH_PI)); PyModule_AddObject(m, "e", PyFloat_FromDouble(Py_MATH_E)); finally: return; }