1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254
|
/* Definitions of some C99 math library functions, for those platforms
that don't implement these functions already. */
#include "Python.h"
#include <float.h>
#include "_math.h"
/* The following copyright notice applies to the original
implementations of acosh, asinh and atanh. */
/*
* ====================================================
* Copyright (C) 1993 by Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
* Developed at SunPro, a Sun Microsystems, Inc. business.
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
* software is freely granted, provided that this notice
* is preserved.
* ====================================================
*/
static const double ln2 = 6.93147180559945286227E-01;
static const double two_pow_m28 = 3.7252902984619141E-09; /* 2**-28 */
static const double two_pow_p28 = 268435456.0; /* 2**28 */
/* acosh(x)
* Method :
* Based on
* acosh(x) = log [ x + sqrt(x*x-1) ]
* we have
* acosh(x) := log(x)+ln2, if x is large; else
* acosh(x) := log(2x-1/(sqrt(x*x-1)+x)) if x>2; else
* acosh(x) := log1p(t+sqrt(2.0*t+t*t)); where t=x-1.
*
* Special cases:
* acosh(x) is NaN with signal if x<1.
* acosh(NaN) is NaN without signal.
*/
double
_Py_acosh(double x)
{
if (Py_IS_NAN(x)) {
return x+x;
}
if (x < 1.) { /* x < 1; return a signaling NaN */
errno = EDOM;
#ifdef Py_NAN
return Py_NAN;
#else
return (x-x)/(x-x);
#endif
}
else if (x >= two_pow_p28) { /* x > 2**28 */
if (Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) {
return x+x;
}
else {
return log(x)+ln2; /* acosh(huge)=log(2x) */
}
}
else if (x == 1.) {
return 0.0; /* acosh(1) = 0 */
}
else if (x > 2.) { /* 2 < x < 2**28 */
double t = x*x;
return log(2.0*x - 1.0 / (x + sqrt(t - 1.0)));
}
else { /* 1 < x <= 2 */
double t = x - 1.0;
return m_log1p(t + sqrt(2.0*t + t*t));
}
}
/* asinh(x)
* Method :
* Based on
* asinh(x) = sign(x) * log [ |x| + sqrt(x*x+1) ]
* we have
* asinh(x) := x if 1+x*x=1,
* := sign(x)*(log(x)+ln2)) for large |x|, else
* := sign(x)*log(2|x|+1/(|x|+sqrt(x*x+1))) if|x|>2, else
* := sign(x)*log1p(|x| + x^2/(1 + sqrt(1+x^2)))
*/
double
_Py_asinh(double x)
{
double w;
double absx = fabs(x);
if (Py_IS_NAN(x) || Py_IS_INFINITY(x)) {
return x+x;
}
if (absx < two_pow_m28) { /* |x| < 2**-28 */
return x; /* return x inexact except 0 */
}
if (absx > two_pow_p28) { /* |x| > 2**28 */
w = log(absx)+ln2;
}
else if (absx > 2.0) { /* 2 < |x| < 2**28 */
w = log(2.0*absx + 1.0 / (sqrt(x*x + 1.0) + absx));
}
else { /* 2**-28 <= |x| < 2= */
double t = x*x;
w = m_log1p(absx + t / (1.0 + sqrt(1.0 + t)));
}
return copysign(w, x);
}
/* atanh(x)
* Method :
* 1.Reduced x to positive by atanh(-x) = -atanh(x)
* 2.For x>=0.5
* 1 2x x
* atanh(x) = --- * log(1 + -------) = 0.5 * log1p(2 * -------)
* 2 1 - x 1 - x
*
* For x<0.5
* atanh(x) = 0.5*log1p(2x+2x*x/(1-x))
*
* Special cases:
* atanh(x) is NaN if |x| >= 1 with signal;
* atanh(NaN) is that NaN with no signal;
*
*/
double
_Py_atanh(double x)
{
double absx;
double t;
if (Py_IS_NAN(x)) {
return x+x;
}
absx = fabs(x);
if (absx >= 1.) { /* |x| >= 1 */
errno = EDOM;
#ifdef Py_NAN
return Py_NAN;
#else
return x/0.0;
#endif
}
if (absx < two_pow_m28) { /* |x| < 2**-28 */
return x;
}
if (absx < 0.5) { /* |x| < 0.5 */
t = absx+absx;
t = 0.5 * m_log1p(t + t*absx / (1.0 - absx));
}
else { /* 0.5 <= |x| <= 1.0 */
t = 0.5 * m_log1p((absx + absx) / (1.0 - absx));
}
return copysign(t, x);
}
/* Mathematically, expm1(x) = exp(x) - 1. The expm1 function is designed
to avoid the significant loss of precision that arises from direct
evaluation of the expression exp(x) - 1, for x near 0. */
double
_Py_expm1(double x)
{
/* For abs(x) >= log(2), it's safe to evaluate exp(x) - 1 directly; this
also works fine for infinities and nans.
For smaller x, we can use a method due to Kahan that achieves close to
full accuracy.
*/
if (fabs(x) < 0.7) {
double u;
u = exp(x);
if (u == 1.0)
return x;
else
return (u - 1.0) * x / log(u);
}
else
return exp(x) - 1.0;
}
/* log1p(x) = log(1+x). The log1p function is designed to avoid the
significant loss of precision that arises from direct evaluation when x is
small. */
#ifdef HAVE_LOG1P
double
_Py_log1p(double x)
{
/* Some platforms supply a log1p function but don't respect the sign of
zero: log1p(-0.0) gives 0.0 instead of the correct result of -0.0.
To save fiddling with configure tests and platform checks, we handle the
special case of zero input directly on all platforms.
*/
if (x == 0.0) {
return x;
}
else {
return log1p(x);
}
}
#else
double
_Py_log1p(double x)
{
/* For x small, we use the following approach. Let y be the nearest float
to 1+x, then
1+x = y * (1 - (y-1-x)/y)
so log(1+x) = log(y) + log(1-(y-1-x)/y). Since (y-1-x)/y is tiny, the
second term is well approximated by (y-1-x)/y. If abs(x) >=
DBL_EPSILON/2 or the rounding-mode is some form of round-to-nearest
then y-1-x will be exactly representable, and is computed exactly by
(y-1)-x.
If abs(x) < DBL_EPSILON/2 and the rounding mode is not known to be
round-to-nearest then this method is slightly dangerous: 1+x could be
rounded up to 1+DBL_EPSILON instead of down to 1, and in that case
y-1-x will not be exactly representable any more and the result can be
off by many ulps. But this is easily fixed: for a floating-point
number |x| < DBL_EPSILON/2., the closest floating-point number to
log(1+x) is exactly x.
*/
double y;
if (fabs(x) < DBL_EPSILON/2.) {
return x;
}
else if (-0.5 <= x && x <= 1.) {
/* WARNING: it's possible than an overeager compiler
will incorrectly optimize the following two lines
to the equivalent of "return log(1.+x)". If this
happens, then results from log1p will be inaccurate
for small x. */
y = 1.+x;
return log(y)-((y-1.)-x)/y;
}
else {
/* NaNs and infinities should end up here */
return log(1.+x);
}
}
#endif /* ifdef HAVE_LOG1P */
|