bignum(3perl) | Perl Programmers Reference Guide | bignum(3perl) |
bignum - transparent big number support for Perl
use bignum; $x = 2 + 4.5; # Math::BigFloat 6.5 print 2 ** 512 * 0.1; # Math::BigFloat 134...09.6 print 2 ** 512; # Math::BigInt 134...096 print inf + 42; # Math::BigInt inf print NaN * 7; # Math::BigInt NaN print hex("0x1234567890123490"); # Perl v5.10.0 or later { no bignum; print 2 ** 256; # a normal Perl scalar now } # for older Perls, import into current package: use bignum qw/hex oct/; print hex("0x1234567890123490"); print oct("01234567890123490");
By default, every literal integer becomes a Math::BigInt object, and literal non-integer becomes a Math::BigFloat object. Whether a numeric literal is considered an integer or non-integers depends only on the value of the constant, not on how it is represented. For instance, the constants 3.14e2 and 0x1.3ap8 become Math::BigInt objects, because they both represent the integer value decimal 314.
The default "use bignum;" is equivalent to
use bignum downgrade => "Math::BigInt", upgrade => "Math::BigFloat";
The classes used for integers and non-integers can be set at compile time with the "downgrade" and "upgrade" options, for example
# use Math::BigInt for integers and Math::BigRat for non-integers use bignum upgrade => "Math::BigRat";
Note that disabling downgrading and upgrading does not affect how numeric literals are converted to objects
# disable both downgrading and upgrading use bignum downgrade => undef, upgrade => undef; $x = 2.4; # becomes 2.4 as a Math::BigFloat $y = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt
By default, when the result of a computation is an integer, an Inf, or a NaN, the result is downgraded even when all the operands are instances of the upgrade class.
use bignum; $x = 2.4; # becomes 2.4 as a Math::BigFloat $y = 1.2; # becomes 1.2 as a Math::BigFloat $z = $x / $y; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt due to downgrading
Equivalently, by default, when the result of a computation is a finite non-integer, the result is upgraded even when all the operands are instances of the downgrade class.
use bignum; $x = 7; # becomes 7 as a Math::BigInt $y = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt $z = $x / $y; # becomes 3.5 as a Math::BigFloat due to upgrading
The classes used for downgrading and upgrading can be set at runtime with the "downgrade()" and "upgrade()" methods, but see "CAVEATS" below.
The upgrade and downgrade classes don't have to be Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat. For example, to use Math::BigRat as the upgrade class, use
use bignum upgrade => "Math::BigRat"; $x = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt $y = 3.6; # becomes 18/5 as a Math::BigRat
The upgrade and downgrade classes can be modified at runtime
use bignum; $x = 3; # becomes 3 as a Math::BigInt $y = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt $z = $x / $y; # becomes 1.5 as a Math::BigFlaot bignum -> upgrade("Math::BigRat"); $w = $x / $y; # becomes 3/2 as a Math::BigRat
Disabling downgrading doesn't change the fact that literal constant integers are converted to the downgrade class, it only prevents downgrading as a result of a computation. E.g.,
use bignum downgrade => undef; $x = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt $y = 2.4; # becomes 2.4 as a Math::BigFloat $z = 1.2; # becomes 1.2 as a Math::BigFloat $w = $x / $y; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigFloat due to no downgrading
If you want all numeric literals, both integers and non-integers, to become Math::BigFloat objects, use the bigfloat pragma.
Equivalently, disabling upgrading doesn't change the fact that literal constant non-integers are converted to the upgrade class, it only prevents upgrading as a result of a computation. E.g.,
use bignum upgrade => undef; $x = 2.5; # becomes 2.5 as a Math::BigFloat $y = 7; # becomes 7 as a Math::BigInt $z = 2; # becomes 2 as a Math::BigInt $w = $x / $y; # becomes 3 as a Math::BigInt due to no upgrading
If you want all numeric literals, both integers and non-integers, to become Math::BigInt objects, use the bigint pragma.
You can even do
use bignum upgrade => "Math::BigRat", upgrade => undef;
which converts all integer literals to Math::BigInt objects and all non-integer literals to Math::BigRat objects. However, when the result of a computation involving two Math::BigInt objects results in a non-integer (e.g., 7/2), the result will be truncted to a Math::BigInt rather than being upgraded to a Math::BigRat, since upgrading is disabled.
Since all numeric literals become objects, you can call all the usual methods from Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat on them. This even works to some extent on expressions:
perl -Mbignum -le '$x = 1234; print $x->bdec()' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 1234->copy()->binc();' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 1234->copy()->binc()->badd(6);'
"bignum" recognizes some options that can be passed while loading it via via "use". The following options exist:
perl -Mbignum=a,50 -le 'print sqrt(20)'
Note that setting precision and accuracy at the same time is not possible.
perl -Mbignum=p,-50 -le 'print sqrt(20)'
Note that setting precision and accuracy at the same time is not possible.
perl -Mbignum=l,GMP -e 'print 2 ** 512' perl -Mbignum=lib,GMP -e 'print 2 ** 512' perl -Mbignum=try,GMP -e 'print 2 ** 512' perl -Mbignum=only,GMP -e 'print 2 ** 512'
perl -Mbignum=v
Math with the numbers is done (by default) by a backend library module called Math::BigInt::Calc. The default is equivalent to saying:
use bignum lib => 'Calc';
you can change this by using:
use bignum lib => 'GMP';
The following would first try to find Math::BigInt::Foo, then Math::BigInt::Bar, and if this also fails, revert to Math::BigInt::Calc:
use bignum lib => 'Foo,Math::BigInt::Bar';
Using c<lib> warns if none of the specified libraries can be found and Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat fell back to one of the default libraries. To suppress this warning, use "try" instead:
use bignum try => 'GMP';
If you want the code to die instead of falling back, use "only" instead:
use bignum only => 'GMP';
Please see respective module documentation for further details.
Since all numbers are now objects, you can use the methods that are part of the Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat API.
But a warning is in order. When using the following to make a copy of a number, only a shallow copy will be made.
$x = 9; $y = $x; $x = $y = 7;
Using the copy or the original with overloaded math is okay, e.g., the following work:
$x = 9; $y = $x; print $x + 1, " ", $y,"\n"; # prints 10 9
but calling any method that modifies the number directly will result in both the original and the copy being destroyed:
$x = 9; $y = $x; print $x->badd(1), " ", $y,"\n"; # prints 10 10 $x = 9; $y = $x; print $x->binc(1), " ", $y,"\n"; # prints 10 10 $x = 9; $y = $x; print $x->bmul(2), " ", $y,"\n"; # prints 18 18
Using methods that do not modify, but test that the contents works:
$x = 9; $y = $x; $z = 9 if $x->is_zero(); # works fine
See the documentation about the copy constructor and "=" in overload, as well as the documentation in Math::BigFloat for further details.
# perl -Mbignum=e -wle 'print e'
Returns Euler's number "e", aka exp(1) (= 2.7182818284...).
# perl -Mbignum=PI -wle 'print PI'
Returns PI (= 3.1415926532..).
bexp($power, $accuracy);
Returns Euler's number "e" raised to the appropriate power, to the wanted accuracy.
Example:
# perl -Mbignum=bexp -wle 'print bexp(1,80)'
bpi($accuracy);
Returns PI to the wanted accuracy.
Example:
# perl -Mbignum=bpi -wle 'print bpi(80)'
use bignum; print "in effect\n" if bignum::in_effect; # true { no bignum; print "in effect\n" if bignum::in_effect; # false }
Returns true or false if "bignum" is in effect in the current scope.
This method only works on Perl v5.9.4 or later.
# Assuming that downgrading and upgrading hasn't been modified so far, so # the downgrade and upgrade classes are Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat, # respectively, the following sets the upgrade class to Math::BigRat, i.e., # makes Math::BigInt upgrade to Math::BigRat: bignum -> upgrade("Math::BigRat"); # The following sets the downgrade class to Math::BigInt::Lite, i.e., makes # the new upgrade class Math::BigRat downgrade to Math::BigInt::Lite bignum -> downgrade("Math::BigInt::Lite"); # Note that at this point, it is still Math::BigInt, not Math::BigInt::Lite, # that upgrades to Math::BigRat, so to get Math::BigInt::Lite to upgrade to # Math::BigRat, we need to do the following (again): bignum -> upgrade("Math::BigRat");
A simpler way to do this at runtime is to use import(),
bignum -> import(upgrade => "Math::BigRat", downgrade => "Math::BigInt::Lite");
This means that arithmetic involving only string values or string literals are performed using Perl's built-in operators.
For example:
use bigrat; my $x = "900000000000000009"; my $y = "900000000000000007"; print $x - $y;
outputs 0 on default 32-bit builds, since "bignum" never sees the string literals. To ensure the expression is all treated as "Math::BigFloat" objects, use a literal number in the expression:
print +(0+$x) - $y;
use 5.010; for my $i (12..13) { for my $j (20..21) { say $i ** $j; # produces a floating-point number, # not an object } }
use bignum qw/hex oct/; print hex("0x1234567890123456"); { no bignum; print hex("0x1234567890123456"); }
The second call to hex() will warn about a non-portable constant.
Compare this to:
use bignum; # will warn only under Perl older than v5.9.4 print hex("0x1234567890123456");
Some cool command line examples to impress the Python crowd ;)
perl -Mbignum -le 'print sqrt(33)' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 2**255' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 4.5+2**255' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 3/7 + 5/7 + 8/3' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 123->is_odd()' perl -Mbignum -le 'print log(2)' perl -Mbignum -le 'print exp(1)' perl -Mbignum -le 'print 2 ** 0.5' perl -Mbignum=a,65 -le 'print 2 ** 0.2' perl -Mbignum=l,GMP -le 'print 7 ** 7777'
Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-bignum at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at <https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Create.html?Queue=bignum> (requires login). We will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc bignum
You can also look for information at:
<https://github.com/pjacklam/p5-bignum>
<https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Name=bignum>
<https://metacpan.org/release/bignum>
<http://matrix.cpantesters.org/?dist=bignum>
<https://cpanratings.perl.org/dist/bignum>
This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
bigint and bigrat.
Math::BigInt, Math::BigFloat, Math::BigRat and Math::Big as well as Math::BigInt::FastCalc, Math::BigInt::Pari and Math::BigInt::GMP.
2023-11-25 | perl v5.36.0 |