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core/num/dec2flt/
mod.rs

1//! Converting decimal strings into IEEE 754 binary floating point numbers.
2//!
3//! # Problem statement
4//!
5//! We are given a decimal string such as `12.34e56`. This string consists of integral (`12`),
6//! fractional (`34`), and exponent (`56`) parts. All parts are optional and interpreted as a
7//! default value (1 or 0) when missing.
8//!
9//! We seek the IEEE 754 floating point number that is closest to the exact value of the decimal
10//! string. It is well-known that many decimal strings do not have terminating representations in
11//! base two, so we round to 0.5 units in the last place (in other words, as well as possible).
12//! Ties, decimal values exactly half-way between two consecutive floats, are resolved with the
13//! half-to-even strategy, also known as banker's rounding.
14//!
15//! Needless to say, this is quite hard, both in terms of implementation complexity and in terms
16//! of CPU cycles taken.
17//!
18//! # Implementation
19//!
20//! First, we ignore signs. Or rather, we remove it at the very beginning of the conversion
21//! process and re-apply it at the very end. This is correct in all edge cases since IEEE
22//! floats are symmetric around zero, negating one simply flips the first bit.
23//!
24//! Then we remove the decimal point by adjusting the exponent: Conceptually, `12.34e56` turns
25//! into `1234e54`, which we describe with a positive integer `f = 1234` and an integer `e = 54`.
26//! The `(f, e)` representation is used by almost all code past the parsing stage.
27//!
28//! We then try a long chain of progressively more general and expensive special cases using
29//! machine-sized integers and small, fixed-sized floating point numbers (first `f32`/`f64`, then
30//! a type with 64 bit significand). The extended-precision algorithm
31//! uses the Eisel-Lemire algorithm, which uses a 128-bit (or 192-bit)
32//! representation that can accurately and quickly compute the vast majority
33//! of floats. When all these fail, we bite the bullet and resort to using
34//! a large-decimal representation, shifting the digits into range, calculating
35//! the upper significant bits and exactly round to the nearest representation.
36//!
37//! Another aspect that needs attention is the ``RawFloat`` trait by which almost all functions
38//! are parametrized. One might think that it's enough to parse to `f64` and cast the result to
39//! `f32`. Unfortunately this is not the world we live in, and this has nothing to do with using
40//! base two or half-to-even rounding.
41//!
42//! Consider for example two types `d2` and `d4` representing a decimal type with two decimal
43//! digits and four decimal digits each and take "0.01499" as input. Let's use half-up rounding.
44//! Going directly to two decimal digits gives `0.01`, but if we round to four digits first,
45//! we get `0.0150`, which is then rounded up to `0.02`. The same principle applies to other
46//! operations as well, if you want 0.5 ULP accuracy you need to do *everything* in full precision
47//! and round *exactly once, at the end*, by considering all truncated bits at once.
48//!
49//! Primarily, this module and its children implement the algorithms described in:
50//! "Number Parsing at a Gigabyte per Second", available online:
51//! <https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.11408>.
52//!
53//! # Other
54//!
55//! The conversion should *never* panic. There are assertions and explicit panics in the code,
56//! but they should never be triggered and only serve as internal sanity checks. Any panics should
57//! be considered a bug.
58//!
59//! There are unit tests but they are woefully inadequate at ensuring correctness, they only cover
60//! a small percentage of possible errors. Far more extensive tests are located in the directory
61//! `src/etc/test-float-parse` as a Rust program.
62//!
63//! A note on integer overflow: Many parts of this file perform arithmetic with the decimal
64//! exponent `e`. Primarily, we shift the decimal point around: Before the first decimal digit,
65//! after the last decimal digit, and so on. This could overflow if done carelessly. We rely on
66//! the parsing submodule to only hand out sufficiently small exponents, where "sufficient" means
67//! "such that the exponent +/- the number of decimal digits fits into a 64 bit integer".
68//! Larger exponents are accepted, but we don't do arithmetic with them, they are immediately
69//! turned into {positive,negative} {zero,infinity}.
70//!
71//! # Notation
72//!
73//! This module uses the same notation as the Lemire paper:
74//!
75//! - `m`: binary mantissa; always nonnegative
76//! - `p`: binary exponent; a signed integer
77//! - `w`: decimal significand; always nonnegative
78//! - `q`: decimal exponent; a signed integer
79//!
80//! This gives `m * 2^p` for the binary floating-point number, with `w * 10^q` as the decimal
81//! equivalent.
82
83#![doc(hidden)]
84#![unstable(
85    feature = "dec2flt",
86    reason = "internal routines only exposed for testing",
87    issue = "none"
88)]
89
90use self::common::BiasedFp;
91use self::float::RawFloat;
92use self::lemire::compute_float;
93use self::parse::{parse_inf_nan, parse_number};
94use self::slow::parse_long_mantissa;
95use crate::error::Error;
96use crate::fmt;
97use crate::str::FromStr;
98
99mod common;
100pub mod decimal;
101pub mod decimal_seq;
102mod fpu;
103mod slow;
104mod table;
105// float is used in flt2dec, and all are used in unit tests.
106pub mod float;
107pub mod lemire;
108pub mod parse;
109
110macro_rules! from_str_float_impl {
111    ($t:ty) => {
112        #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
113        impl FromStr for $t {
114            type Err = ParseFloatError;
115
116            /// Converts a string in base 10 to a float.
117            /// Accepts an optional decimal exponent.
118            ///
119            /// This function accepts strings such as
120            ///
121            /// * '3.14'
122            /// * '-3.14'
123            /// * '2.5E10', or equivalently, '2.5e10'
124            /// * '2.5E-10'
125            /// * '5.'
126            /// * '.5', or, equivalently, '0.5'
127            /// * 'inf', '-inf', '+infinity', 'NaN'
128            ///
129            /// Note that alphabetical characters are not case-sensitive.
130            ///
131            /// Leading and trailing whitespace represent an error.
132            ///
133            /// # Grammar
134            ///
135            /// All strings that adhere to the following [EBNF] grammar when
136            /// lowercased will result in an [`Ok`] being returned:
137            ///
138            /// ```txt
139            /// Float  ::= Sign? ( 'inf' | 'infinity' | 'nan' | Number )
140            /// Number ::= ( Digit+ |
141            ///              Digit+ '.' Digit* |
142            ///              Digit* '.' Digit+ ) Exp?
143            /// Exp    ::= 'e' Sign? Digit+
144            /// Sign   ::= [+-]
145            /// Digit  ::= [0-9]
146            /// ```
147            ///
148            /// [EBNF]: https://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#sec-notation
149            ///
150            /// # Arguments
151            ///
152            /// * src - A string
153            ///
154            /// # Return value
155            ///
156            /// `Err(ParseFloatError)` if the string did not represent a valid
157            /// number. Otherwise, `Ok(n)` where `n` is the closest
158            /// representable floating-point number to the number represented
159            /// by `src` (following the same rules for rounding as for the
160            /// results of primitive operations).
161            // We add the `#[inline(never)]` attribute, since its content will
162            // be filled with that of `dec2flt`, which has #[inline(always)].
163            // Since `dec2flt` is generic, a normal inline attribute on this function
164            // with `dec2flt` having no attributes results in heavily repeated
165            // generation of `dec2flt`, despite the fact only a maximum of 2
166            // possible instances can ever exist. Adding #[inline(never)] avoids this.
167            #[inline(never)]
168            fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result<Self, ParseFloatError> {
169                dec2flt(src)
170            }
171        }
172    };
173}
174from_str_float_impl!(f32);
175from_str_float_impl!(f64);
176
177/// An error which can be returned when parsing a float.
178///
179/// This error is used as the error type for the [`FromStr`] implementation
180/// for [`f32`] and [`f64`].
181///
182/// # Example
183///
184/// ```
185/// use std::str::FromStr;
186///
187/// if let Err(e) = f64::from_str("a.12") {
188///     println!("Failed conversion to f64: {e}");
189/// }
190/// ```
191#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]
192#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
193pub struct ParseFloatError {
194    kind: FloatErrorKind,
195}
196
197#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]
198enum FloatErrorKind {
199    Empty,
200    Invalid,
201}
202
203#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
204impl Error for ParseFloatError {
205    #[allow(deprecated)]
206    fn description(&self) -> &str {
207        match self.kind {
208            FloatErrorKind::Empty => "cannot parse float from empty string",
209            FloatErrorKind::Invalid => "invalid float literal",
210        }
211    }
212}
213
214#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
215impl fmt::Display for ParseFloatError {
216    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
217        #[allow(deprecated)]
218        self.description().fmt(f)
219    }
220}
221
222#[inline]
223pub(super) fn pfe_empty() -> ParseFloatError {
224    ParseFloatError { kind: FloatErrorKind::Empty }
225}
226
227// Used in unit tests, keep public.
228// This is much better than making FloatErrorKind and ParseFloatError::kind public.
229#[inline]
230pub fn pfe_invalid() -> ParseFloatError {
231    ParseFloatError { kind: FloatErrorKind::Invalid }
232}
233
234/// Converts a `BiasedFp` to the closest machine float type.
235fn biased_fp_to_float<F: RawFloat>(x: BiasedFp) -> F {
236    let mut word = x.m;
237    word |= (x.p_biased as u64) << F::SIG_BITS;
238    F::from_u64_bits(word)
239}
240
241/// Converts a decimal string into a floating point number.
242#[inline(always)] // Will be inlined into a function with `#[inline(never)]`, see above
243pub fn dec2flt<F: RawFloat>(s: &str) -> Result<F, ParseFloatError> {
244    let mut s = s.as_bytes();
245    let c = if let Some(&c) = s.first() {
246        c
247    } else {
248        return Err(pfe_empty());
249    };
250    let negative = c == b'-';
251    if c == b'-' || c == b'+' {
252        s = &s[1..];
253    }
254    if s.is_empty() {
255        return Err(pfe_invalid());
256    }
257
258    let mut num = match parse_number(s) {
259        Some(r) => r,
260        None if let Some(value) = parse_inf_nan(s, negative) => return Ok(value),
261        None => return Err(pfe_invalid()),
262    };
263    num.negative = negative;
264    if !cfg!(feature = "optimize_for_size") {
265        if let Some(value) = num.try_fast_path::<F>() {
266            return Ok(value);
267        }
268    }
269
270    // If significant digits were truncated, then we can have rounding error
271    // only if `mantissa + 1` produces a different result. We also avoid
272    // redundantly using the Eisel-Lemire algorithm if it was unable to
273    // correctly round on the first pass.
274    let mut fp = compute_float::<F>(num.exponent, num.mantissa);
275    if num.many_digits
276        && fp.p_biased >= 0
277        && fp != compute_float::<F>(num.exponent, num.mantissa + 1)
278    {
279        fp.p_biased = -1;
280    }
281    // Unable to correctly round the float using the Eisel-Lemire algorithm.
282    // Fallback to a slower, but always correct algorithm.
283    if fp.p_biased < 0 {
284        fp = parse_long_mantissa::<F>(s);
285    }
286
287    let mut float = biased_fp_to_float::<F>(fp);
288    if num.negative {
289        float = -float;
290    }
291    Ok(float)
292}
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