NAME¶
Math::BigInt::Calc - Pure Perl module to support Math::BigInt
SYNOPSIS¶
This library provides support for big integer calculations. It is not intended
to be used by other modules. Other modules which support the same API (see
below) can also be used to support Math::BigInt, like Math::BigInt::GMP and
Math::BigInt::Pari.
DESCRIPTION¶
In this library, the numbers are represented in base B = 10**N, where N is the
largest possible value that does not cause overflow in the intermediate
computations. The base B elements are stored in an array, with the least
significant element stored in array element zero. There are no leading zero
elements, except a single zero element when the number is zero.
For instance, if B = 10000, the number 1234567890 is represented internally as
[3456, 7890, 12].
THE Math::BigInt API¶
In order to allow for multiple big integer libraries, Math::BigInt was rewritten
to use a plug-in library for core math routines. Any module which conforms to
the API can be used by Math::BigInt by using this in your program:
use Math::BigInt lib => 'libname';
'libname' is either the long name, like 'Math::BigInt::Pari', or only the short
version, like 'Pari'.
General Notes¶
A library only needs to deal with unsigned big integers. Testing of input
parameter validity is done by the caller, so there is no need to worry about
underflow (e.g., in "_sub()" and "_dec()") nor about
division by zero (e.g., in "_div()") or similar cases.
For some methods, the first parameter can be modified. That includes the
possibility that you return a reference to a completely different object
instead. Although keeping the reference and just changing its contents is
preferred over creating and returning a different reference.
Return values are always objects, strings, Perl scalars, or true/false for
comparison routines.
API version 1¶
The following methods must be defined in order to support the use by
Math::BigInt v1.70 or later.
API version
- api_version()
- Return API version as a Perl scalar, 1 for Math::BigInt
v1.70, 2 for Math::BigInt v1.83.
Constructors
- _new(STR)
- Convert a string representing an unsigned decimal number to
an object representing the same number. The input is normalize, i.e., it
matches "^(0|[1-9]\d*)$".
- _zero()
- Return an object representing the number zero.
- _one()
- Return an object representing the number one.
- _two()
- Return an object representing the number two.
- _ten()
- Return an object representing the number ten.
- _from_bin(STR)
- Return an object given a string representing a binary
number. The input has a '0b' prefix and matches the regular expression
"^0[bB](0|1[01]*)$".
- _from_oct(STR)
- Return an object given a string representing an octal
number. The input has a '0' prefix and matches the regular expression
"^0[1-7]*$".
- _from_hex(STR)
- Return an object given a string representing a hexadecimal
number. The input has a '0x' prefix and matches the regular expression
"^0x(0|[1-9a-fA-F][\da-fA-F]*)$".
Mathematical functions
Each of these methods may modify the first input argument, except
_bgcd() , which shall not modify any input argument, and
_sub() which may modify the second input argument.
- _add(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Returns the result of adding OBJ2 to OBJ1.
- _mul(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Returns the result of multiplying OBJ2 and OBJ1.
- _div(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Returns the result of dividing OBJ1 by OBJ2 and truncating
the result to an integer.
- _sub(OBJ1, OBJ2, FLAG)
- _sub(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Returns the result of subtracting OBJ2 by OBJ1. If
"flag" is false or omitted, OBJ1 might be modified. If
"flag" is true, OBJ2 might be modified.
- _dec(OBJ)
- Decrement OBJ by one.
- _inc(OBJ)
- Increment OBJ by one.
- _mod(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return OBJ1 modulo OBJ2, i.e., the remainder after dividing
OBJ1 by OBJ2.
- _sqrt(OBJ)
- Return the square root of the object, truncated to
integer.
- _root(OBJ, N)
- Return Nth root of the object, truncated to int. N is >=
3.
- _fac(OBJ)
- Return factorial of object (1*2*3*4*...).
- _pow(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return OBJ1 to the power of OBJ2. By convention, 0**0 =
1.
- _modinv(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return modular multiplicative inverse, i.e., return OBJ3 so
that
(OBJ3 * OBJ1) % OBJ2 = 1 % OBJ2
The result is returned as two arguments. If the modular multiplicative
inverse does not exist, both arguments are undefined. Otherwise, the
arguments are a number (object) and its sign ("+" or
"-").
The output value, with its sign, must either be a positive value in the
range 1,2,...,OBJ2-1 or the same value subtracted OBJ2. For instance, if
the input arguments are objects representing the numbers 7 and 5, the
method must either return an object representing the number 3 and a
"+" sign, since (3*7) % 5 = 1 % 5, or an object representing the
number 2 and "-" sign, since (-2*7) % 5 = 1 % 5.
- _modpow(OBJ1, OBJ2, OBJ3)
- Return modular exponentiation, (OBJ1 ** OBJ2) % OBJ3.
- _rsft(OBJ, N, B)
- Shift object N digits right in base B and return the
resulting object. This is equivalent to performing integer division by
B**N and discarding the remainder, except that it might be much faster,
depending on how the number is represented internally.
For instance, if the object $obj represents the hexadecimal number 0xabcde,
then "_rsft($obj, 2, 16)" returns an object representing the
number 0xabc. The "remainer", 0xde, is discarded and not
returned.
- _lsft(OBJ, N, B)
- Shift the object N digits left in base B. This is
equivalent to multiplying by B**N, except that it might be much faster,
depending on how the number is represented internally.
- _log_int(OBJ, B)
- Return integer log of OBJ to base BASE. This method has two
output arguments, the OBJECT and a STATUS. The STATUS is Perl scalar; it
is 1 if OBJ is the exact result, 0 if the result was truncted to give OBJ,
and undef if it is unknown whether OBJ is the exact result.
- _gcd(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return the greatest common divisor of OBJ1 and OBJ2.
Bitwise operators
Each of these methods may modify the first input argument.
- _and(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return bitwise and. If necessary, the smallest number is
padded with leading zeros.
- _or(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return bitwise or. If necessary, the smallest number is
padded with leading zeros.
- _xor(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return bitwise exclusive or. If necessary, the smallest
number is padded with leading zeros.
Boolean operators
- _is_zero(OBJ)
- Returns a true value if OBJ is zero, and false value
otherwise.
- _is_one(OBJ)
- Returns a true value if OBJ is one, and false value
otherwise.
- _is_two(OBJ)
- Returns a true value if OBJ is two, and false value
otherwise.
- _is_ten(OBJ)
- Returns a true value if OBJ is ten, and false value
otherwise.
- _is_even(OBJ)
- Return a true value if OBJ is an even integer, and a false
value otherwise.
- _is_odd(OBJ)
- Return a true value if OBJ is an even integer, and a false
value otherwise.
- _acmp(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Compare OBJ1 and OBJ2 and return -1, 0, or 1, if OBJ1 is
less than, equal to, or larger than OBJ2, respectively.
String conversion
- _str(OBJ)
- Return a string representing the object. The returned
string should have no leading zeros, i.e., it should match
"^(0|[1-9]\d*)$".
- _as_bin(OBJ)
- Return the binary string representation of the number. The
string must have a '0b' prefix.
- _as_oct(OBJ)
- Return the octal string representation of the number. The
string must have a '0x' prefix.
Note: This method was required from Math::BigInt version 1.78, but the
required API version number was not incremented, so there are older
libraries that support API version 1, but do not support
"_as_oct()".
- _as_hex(OBJ)
- Return the hexadecimal string representation of the number.
The string must have a '0x' prefix.
Numeric conversion
- _num(OBJ)
- Given an object, return a Perl scalar number (int/float)
representing this number.
Miscellaneous
- _copy(OBJ)
- Return a true copy of the object.
- _len(OBJ)
- Returns the number of the decimal digits in the number. The
output is a Perl scalar.
- _zeros(OBJ)
- Return the number of trailing decimal zeros. The output is
a Perl scalar.
- _digit(OBJ, N)
- Return the Nth digit as a Perl scalar. N is a Perl scalar,
where zero refers to the rightmost (least significant) digit, and negative
values count from the left (most significant digit). If $obj represents
the number 123, then _digit($obj, 0) is 3 and _digit(123,
-1) is 1.
- _check(OBJ)
- Return a true value if the object is OK, and a false value
otherwise. This is a check routine to test the internal state of the
object for corruption.
API version 2¶
The following methods are required for an API version of 2 or greater.
Constructors
- _1ex(N)
- Return an object representing the number 10**N where N
>= 0 is a Perl scalar.
Mathematical functions
- _nok(OBJ1, OBJ2)
- Return the binomial coefficient OBJ1 over OBJ1.
Miscellaneous
- _alen(OBJ)
- Return the approximate number of decimal digits of the
object. The output is one Perl scalar. This estimate must be greater than
or equal to what "_len()" returns.
API optional methods¶
The following methods are optional, and can be defined if the underlying lib has
a fast way to do them. If undefined, Math::BigInt will use pure Perl (hence
slow) fallback routines to emulate these:
Signed bitwise operators.
Each of these methods may modify the first input argument.
- _signed_or(OBJ1, OBJ2, SIGN1, SIGN2)
- Return the signed bitwise or.
- _signed_and(OBJ1, OBJ2, SIGN1, SIGN2)
- Return the signed bitwise and.
- _signed_xor(OBJ1, OBJ2, SIGN1, SIGN2)
- Return the signed bitwise exclusive or.
WRAP YOUR OWN¶
If you want to port your own favourite c-lib for big numbers to the Math::BigInt
interface, you can take any of the already existing modules as a rough
guideline. You should really wrap up the latest BigInt and BigFloat testsuites
with your module, and replace in them any of the following:
use Math::BigInt;
by this:
use Math::BigInt lib => 'yourlib';
This way you ensure that your library really works 100% within Math::BigInt.
LICENSE¶
This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHORS¶
- •
- Original math code by Mark Biggar, rewritten by Tels
<http://bloodgate.com/> in late 2000.
- •
- Separated from BigInt and shaped API with the help of John
Peacock.
- •
- Fixed, speed-up, streamlined and enhanced by Tels 2001 -
2007.
- •
- API documentation corrected and extended by Peter John
Acklam, <pjacklam@online.no>
SEE ALSO¶
Math::BigInt, Math::BigFloat, Math::BigInt::GMP, Math::BigInt::FastCalc and
Math::BigInt::Pari.