fpclassify
-
NAME
- fpclassify — Floating point number classification of Tcl values
-
SYNOPSIS
-
DESCRIPTION
-
zero
-
subnormal
-
normal
-
infinite
-
nan
-
EXAMPLE
-
SEE ALSO
-
KEYWORDS
-
STANDARDS
-
COPYRIGHT
Name
fpclassify — Floating point number classification of Tcl values
Synopsis
package require
tcl 9.0 fpclassify value Description
The
fpclassify command takes a floating point number,
value, and returns one of the following strings that describe it:
- zero
- value is a floating point zero.
- subnormal
- value is the result of a gradual underflow.
- normal
- value is an ordinary floating-point number (not zero, subnormal, infinite, nor NaN).
- infinite
- value is a floating-point infinity.
- nan
- value is Not-a-Number.
The fpclassify command throws an error if value is not a floating-point value and cannot be converted to one.
Example
This shows how to check whether the result of a computation is numerically safe or not. (Note however that it does not guard against numerical errors; just against representational problems.)
set value [command-that-computes-a-value]
switch [fpclassify $value] {
normal - zero {
puts "Result is $value"
}
infinite {
puts "Result is infinite"
}
subnormal {
puts "Result is $value - WARNING! precision lost"
}
nan {
puts "Computation completely failed"
}
} See also
expr,
mathfunc Standards
This command depends on the
fpclassify() C macro conforming to “ISO C99” (i.e., to ISO/IEC 9899:1999).
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 Kevin B. Kenny <
[email protected]>. All rights reserved
Copyright © 2018 Kevin B. Kenny <kennykb(at)acm.org>. All rights reserved
Copyright © 2019 Donal Fellows