Version 0.5, April 11, 2018
Albert Graef <aggraef@gmail.com>
The GNU MPFR library is a C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with correct rounding. It is based on GMP which Pure also uses for its bigint support.
This module makes the MPFR multiprecision floats (henceforth referred to as mpfr numbers or values) available in Pure, so that they work with the other types of Pure numbers in an almost seamless fashion. Pure mpfr values are represented as pointers which can readily be passed as arguments to the MPFR functions, so the representation only involves minimal overhead on the Pure side.
The module defines the type of mpfr values as an instance of Pure’s real type, so that it becomes a well-behaved citizen of Pure’s numeric tower. Memory management of these values is automatic. You can create an mpfr value from any other kind of Pure real value (int, bigint or double), or from a string in decimal notation, using the mpfr function. Back conversions are provided from mpfr to int, bigint, double and string (the latter by means of a custom pretty-printer installed by this module, so that mpfr values are printed in a format similar to the printf %g format). Integration with Pure’s complex type is provided as well.
Please note that this module needs more testing and the API hasn’t been finalized yet, but it should be perfectly usable already. As usual, please report any bugs on the Pure issue tracker, on the Pure mailing list, or directly to the author, see http://purelang.bitbucket.org/.
Copyright (c) 2011 by Albert Graef.
pure-mpfr is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
pure-mpfr is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Get the latest source from https://bitbucket.org/purelang/pure-lang/downloads/pure-mpfr-0.5.tar.gz.
Run make to compile the module and make install (as root) to install it in the Pure library directory. This requires GNU make, and of course you need to have Pure and libmpfr installed.
make tries to guess your Pure installation directory and platform-specific setup. If it gets this wrong, you can set some variables manually, please check the Makefile for details.
Note
This module requires Pure 0.50 or later and libmpfr 3.x (3.0.0 has been tested). Older libmpfr versions (2.x) probably require some work.
After installation, you can use the operations of this module by placing the following import declaration in your Pure programs:
using mpfr;
Note
This also pulls in the math standard library module, whose operations are overloaded by the mpfr module in order to provide support for mpfr values. Thus you don’t need to explicitly import the math module when using the mpfr module.
If you use both the mpfr module and the pointers standard library module in your script, make sure that you import the pointers module after mpfr, so that the definitions of pointer arithmetic in the pointers module do not interfere with the overloading of arithmetic operations in the mpfr module.
The following operations of the MPFR library are provided to inspect and change the default precision and rounding modes used by MPFR.
Get and set the default precision in terms of number of bits in the mantissa, including the sign. MPFR initially sets this to 53 (matching the mantissa size of double values). It can be changed to any desired value not less than 2.
Get the precision of an mpfr number x. Note that mpfr numbers always keep the precision they were created with, but it is possible to create a new mpfr number with any given precision from an existing mpfr number using the mpfr function, see below.
Get and set the default rounding mode, which is used for all arithmetic operations and mathematical functions provided by this module. The given rounding mode rnd must be one of the supported rounding modes listed below.
Supported rounding modes. Please check the MPFR documentation for details.
In addition, the following operations enable you to control the precision in textual representations of mpfr values. This information is used by the custom pretty-printer for mpfr values installed by the module.
The module defines the following data type for representing mpfr values, which is a subtype of the Pure real type:
This is a tagged pointer type (denoted mpfr* in Pure extern declarations) which is compatible with the mpfr_t and mpfr_ptr data types of the MPFR C library. Members of this type are “cooked” pointers, which are allocated dynamically and freed automatically when they are garbage-collected (by means of a corresponding Pure sentry).
Type predicate checking for mpfr values.
The following operations are provided to convert between mpfr numbers and other kinds of Pure real values.
This function converts any real number (int, bigint, double, rational, mpfr) to an mpfr value.
Optionally, it is possible to specify a precision (number of bits in the mantissa) prec and a rounding mode rnd (one of the MPFR_RND constants), otherwise MPFR’s default precision and rounding mode are used (see Precision and Rounding above). Note that this function may also be used to convert an mpfr to a new mpfr number, possibly with a different precision and rounding.
The argument x can also be a string denoting a floating point number in decimal notation with optional sign, decimal point and/or scaling factor, which is parsed and converted to an mpfr number using the corresponding MPFR function.
Convert an mpfr number x to the corresponding type of real number. Please note that there is no rational conversion, as MPFR does not provide such an operation, but if you need this then you can first convert x to a double and then apply the standard library rational function to it (this may loose precision, of course).
The following standard operators (see the Pure Library Manual) are overloaded to provide mpfr arithmetic and comparisons. These all handle mixed mpfr/real operands.
The following functions from the math module are overloaded to provide support for mpfr values. Note that it is also possible to invoke the corresponding functions from the MPFR library in a direct fashion, using the same function names with an additional _mpfr suffix. These functions also accept other kinds of real arguments which are converted to mpfr before applying the MPFR function.
Absolute value (this is implemented directly, so there’s no corresponding _mpfr function for this).
Import the module and set the default precision:
> using mpfr;
> mpfr_set_default_prec 64; // extended precision (long double on x86)
()
Calculate pi with the current precision. Note that mixed arithmetic works with any combination of real and mpfr numbers.
> let Pi = 4*atan (mpfr 1);
> pi; Pi; abs (Pi-pi);
3.14159265358979
3.14159265358979323851
1.22514845490862001043e-16
> let Pi2 = Pi^2;
> Pi2; sqrt Pi2; sqrt Pi2 == Pi;
9.86960440108935861941
3.14159265358979323851
1
You can also query the precision of a number and change it on the fly:
> Pi; mpfr_get_prec Pi;
3.14159265358979323851
64
> let Pi1 = mpfr (Pi,53); Pi1; mpfr_get_prec Pi1;
3.1415926535897931
53
Complex mpfr numbers work, too:
> let z = mpfr 2^(1/i); z;
0.769238901363972126565+:-0.638961276313634801184
> let z = ln z/ln (mpfr 2); z;
0.0+:-1.0
> abs z, arg z;
1.0,-1.57079632679489661926
> polar z;
1.0<:-1.57079632679489661926