// Copyright 2015 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // This file implements nat-to-string conversion functions. package big import ( "errors" "fmt" "io" "math" "math/bits" "sync" ) const digits = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" // Note: MaxBase = len(digits), but it must remain an untyped rune constant // for API compatibility. // MaxBase is the largest number base accepted for string conversions. const MaxBase = 10 + ('z' - 'a' + 1) + ('Z' - 'A' + 1) const maxBaseSmall = 10 + ('z' - 'a' + 1) // maxPow returns (b**n, n) such that b**n is the largest power b**n <= _M. // For instance maxPow(10) == (1e19, 19) for 19 decimal digits in a 64bit Word. // In other words, at most n digits in base b fit into a Word. // TODO(gri) replace this with a table, generated at build time. func maxPow(b Word) (p Word, n int) { p, n = b, 1 // assuming b <= _M for max := _M / b; p <= max; { // p == b**n && p <= max p *= b n++ } // p == b**n && p <= _M return } // pow returns x**n for n > 0, and 1 otherwise. func pow(x Word, n int) (p Word) { // n == sum of bi * 2**i, for 0 <= i < imax, and bi is 0 or 1 // thus x**n == product of x**(2**i) for all i where bi == 1 // (Russian Peasant Method for exponentiation) p = 1 for n > 0 { if n&1 != 0 { p *= x } x *= x n >>= 1 } return } // scan errors var ( errNoDigits = errors.New("number has no digits") errInvalSep = errors.New("'_' must separate successive digits") ) // scan scans the number corresponding to the longest possible prefix // from r representing an unsigned number in a given conversion base. // scan returns the corresponding natural number res, the actual base b, // a digit count, and a read or syntax error err, if any. // // For base 0, an underscore character “_” may appear between a base // prefix and an adjacent digit, and between successive digits; such // underscores do not change the value of the number, or the returned // digit count. Incorrect placement of underscores is reported as an // error if there are no other errors. If base != 0, underscores are // not recognized and thus terminate scanning like any other character // that is not a valid radix point or digit. // // number = mantissa | prefix pmantissa . // prefix = "0" [ "b" | "B" | "o" | "O" | "x" | "X" ] . // mantissa = digits "." [ digits ] | digits | "." digits . // pmantissa = [ "_" ] digits "." [ digits ] | [ "_" ] digits | "." digits . // digits = digit { [ "_" ] digit } . // digit = "0" ... "9" | "a" ... "z" | "A" ... "Z" . // // Unless fracOk is set, the base argument must be 0 or a value between // 2 and MaxBase. If fracOk is set, the base argument must be one of // 0, 2, 8, 10, or 16. Providing an invalid base argument leads to a run- // time panic. // // For base 0, the number prefix determines the actual base: A prefix of // “0b” or “0B” selects base 2, “0o” or “0O” selects base 8, and // “0x” or “0X” selects base 16. If fracOk is false, a “0” prefix // (immediately followed by digits) selects base 8 as well. Otherwise, // the selected base is 10 and no prefix is accepted. // // If fracOk is set, a period followed by a fractional part is permitted. // The result value is computed as if there were no period present; and // the count value is used to determine the fractional part. // // For bases <= 36, lower and upper case letters are considered the same: // The letters 'a' to 'z' and 'A' to 'Z' represent digit values 10 to 35. // For bases > 36, the upper case letters 'A' to 'Z' represent the digit // values 36 to 61. // // A result digit count > 0 corresponds to the number of (non-prefix) digits // parsed. A digit count <= 0 indicates the presence of a period (if fracOk // is set, only), and -count is the number of fractional digits found. // In this case, the actual value of the scanned number is res * b**count. func (z nat) scan(r io.ByteScanner, base int, fracOk bool) (res nat, b, count int, err error) { // reject invalid bases baseOk := base == 0 || !fracOk && 2 <= base && base <= MaxBase || fracOk && (base == 2 || base == 8 || base == 10 || base == 16) if !baseOk { panic(fmt.Sprintf("invalid number base %d", base)) } // prev encodes the previously seen char: it is one // of '_', '0' (a digit), or '.' (anything else). A // valid separator '_' may only occur after a digit // and if base == 0. prev := '.' invalSep := false // one char look-ahead ch, err := r.ReadByte() // determine actual base b, prefix := base, 0 if base == 0 { // actual base is 10 unless there's a base prefix b = 10 if err == nil && ch == '0' { prev = '0' count = 1 ch, err = r.ReadByte() if err == nil { // possibly one of 0b, 0B, 0o, 0O, 0x, 0X switch ch { case 'b', 'B': b, prefix = 2, 'b' case 'o', 'O': b, prefix = 8, 'o' case 'x', 'X': b, prefix = 16, 'x' default: if !fracOk { b, prefix = 8, '0' } } if prefix != 0 { count = 0 // prefix is not counted if prefix != '0' { ch, err = r.ReadByte() } } } } } // convert string // Algorithm: Collect digits in groups of at most n digits in di // and then use mulAddWW for every such group to add them to the // result. z = z[:0] b1 := Word(b) bn, n := maxPow(b1) // at most n digits in base b1 fit into Word di := Word(0) // 0 <= di < b1**i < bn i := 0 // 0 <= i < n dp := -1 // position of decimal point for err == nil { if ch == '.' && fracOk { fracOk = false if prev == '_' { invalSep = true } prev = '.' dp = count } else if ch == '_' && base == 0 { if prev != '0' { invalSep = true } prev = '_' } else { // convert rune into digit value d1 var d1 Word switch { case '0' <= ch && ch <= '9': d1 = Word(ch - '0') case 'a' <= ch && ch <= 'z': d1 = Word(ch - 'a' + 10) case 'A' <= ch && ch <= 'Z': if b <= maxBaseSmall { d1 = Word(ch - 'A' + 10) } else { d1 = Word(ch - 'A' + maxBaseSmall) } default: d1 = MaxBase + 1 } if d1 >= b1 { r.UnreadByte() // ch does not belong to number anymore break } prev = '0' count++ // collect d1 in di di = di*b1 + d1 i++ // if di is "full", add it to the result if i == n { z = z.mulAddWW(z, bn, di) di = 0 i = 0 } } ch, err = r.ReadByte() } if err == io.EOF { err = nil } // other errors take precedence over invalid separators if err == nil && (invalSep || prev == '_') { err = errInvalSep } if count == 0 { // no digits found if prefix == '0' { // there was only the octal prefix 0 (possibly followed by separators and digits > 7); // interpret as decimal 0 return z[:0], 10, 1, err } err = errNoDigits // fall through; result will be 0 } // add remaining digits to result if i > 0 { z = z.mulAddWW(z, pow(b1, i), di) } res = z.norm() // adjust count for fraction, if any if dp >= 0 { // 0 <= dp <= count count = dp - count } return } // utoa converts x to an ASCII representation in the given base; // base must be between 2 and MaxBase, inclusive. func (x nat) utoa(base int) []byte { return x.itoa(false, base) } // itoa is like utoa but it prepends a '-' if neg && x != 0. func (x nat) itoa(neg bool, base int) []byte { if base < 2 || base > MaxBase { panic("invalid base") } // x == 0 if len(x) == 0 { return []byte("0") } // len(x) > 0 // allocate buffer for conversion i := int(float64(x.bitLen())/math.Log2(float64(base))) + 1 // off by 1 at most if neg { i++ } s := make([]byte, i) // convert power of two and non power of two bases separately if b := Word(base); b == b&-b { // shift is base b digit size in bits shift := uint(bits.TrailingZeros(uint(b))) // shift > 0 because b >= 2 mask := Word(1<= shift { i-- s[i] = digits[w&mask] w >>= shift nbits -= shift } // convert any partial leading digit and advance to next word if nbits == 0 { // no partial digit remaining, just advance w = x[k] nbits = _W } else { // partial digit in current word w (== x[k-1]) and next word x[k] w |= x[k] << nbits i-- s[i] = digits[w&mask] // advance w = x[k] >> (shift - nbits) nbits = _W - (shift - nbits) } } // convert digits of most-significant word w (omit leading zeros) for w != 0 { i-- s[i] = digits[w&mask] w >>= shift } } else { bb, ndigits := maxPow(b) // construct table of successive squares of bb*leafSize to use in subdivisions // result (table != nil) <=> (len(x) > leafSize > 0) table := divisors(len(x), b, ndigits, bb) // preserve x, create local copy for use by convertWords q := nat(nil).set(x) // convert q to string s in base b q.convertWords(s, b, ndigits, bb, table) // strip leading zeros // (x != 0; thus s must contain at least one non-zero digit // and the loop will terminate) i = 0 for s[i] == '0' { i++ } } if neg { i-- s[i] = '-' } return s[i:] } // Convert words of q to base b digits in s. If q is large, it is recursively "split in half" // by nat/nat division using tabulated divisors. Otherwise, it is converted iteratively using // repeated nat/Word division. // // The iterative method processes n Words by n divW() calls, each of which visits every Word in the // incrementally shortened q for a total of n + (n-1) + (n-2) ... + 2 + 1, or n(n+1)/2 divW()'s. // Recursive conversion divides q by its approximate square root, yielding two parts, each half // the size of q. Using the iterative method on both halves means 2 * (n/2)(n/2 + 1)/2 divW()'s // plus the expensive long div(). Asymptotically, the ratio is favorable at 1/2 the divW()'s, and // is made better by splitting the subblocks recursively. Best is to split blocks until one more // split would take longer (because of the nat/nat div()) than the twice as many divW()'s of the // iterative approach. This threshold is represented by leafSize. Benchmarking of leafSize in the // range 2..64 shows that values of 8 and 16 work well, with a 4x speedup at medium lengths and // ~30x for 20000 digits. Use nat_test.go's BenchmarkLeafSize tests to optimize leafSize for // specific hardware. func (q nat) convertWords(s []byte, b Word, ndigits int, bb Word, table []divisor) { // split larger blocks recursively if table != nil { // len(q) > leafSize > 0 var r nat index := len(table) - 1 for len(q) > leafSize { // find divisor close to sqrt(q) if possible, but in any case < q maxLength := q.bitLen() // ~= log2 q, or at of least largest possible q of this bit length minLength := maxLength >> 1 // ~= log2 sqrt(q) for index > 0 && table[index-1].nbits > minLength { index-- // desired } if table[index].nbits >= maxLength && table[index].bbb.cmp(q) >= 0 { index-- if index < 0 { panic("internal inconsistency") } } // split q into the two digit number (q'*bbb + r) to form independent subblocks q, r = q.div(r, q, table[index].bbb) // convert subblocks and collect results in s[:h] and s[h:] h := len(s) - table[index].ndigits r.convertWords(s[h:], b, ndigits, bb, table[0:index]) s = s[:h] // == q.convertWords(s, b, ndigits, bb, table[0:index+1]) } } // having split any large blocks now process the remaining (small) block iteratively i := len(s) var r Word if b == 10 { // hard-coding for 10 here speeds this up by 1.25x (allows for / and % by constants) for len(q) > 0 { // extract least significant, base bb "digit" q, r = q.divW(q, bb) for j := 0; j < ndigits && i > 0; j++ { i-- // avoid % computation since r%10 == r - int(r/10)*10; // this appears to be faster for BenchmarkString10000Base10 // and smaller strings (but a bit slower for larger ones) t := r / 10 s[i] = '0' + byte(r-t*10) r = t } } } else { for len(q) > 0 { // extract least significant, base bb "digit" q, r = q.divW(q, bb) for j := 0; j < ndigits && i > 0; j++ { i-- s[i] = digits[r%b] r /= b } } } // prepend high-order zeros for i > 0 { // while need more leading zeros i-- s[i] = '0' } } // Split blocks greater than leafSize Words (or set to 0 to disable recursive conversion) // Benchmark and configure leafSize using: go test -bench="Leaf" // // 8 and 16 effective on 3.0 GHz Xeon "Clovertown" CPU (128 byte cache lines) // 8 and 16 effective on 2.66 GHz Core 2 Duo "Penryn" CPU var leafSize int = 8 // number of Word-size binary values treat as a monolithic block type divisor struct { bbb nat // divisor nbits int // bit length of divisor (discounting leading zeros) ~= log2(bbb) ndigits int // digit length of divisor in terms of output base digits } var cacheBase10 struct { sync.Mutex table [64]divisor // cached divisors for base 10 } // expWW computes x**y func (z nat) expWW(x, y Word) nat { return z.expNN(nat(nil).setWord(x), nat(nil).setWord(y), nil, false) } // construct table of powers of bb*leafSize to use in subdivisions. func divisors(m int, b Word, ndigits int, bb Word) []divisor { // only compute table when recursive conversion is enabled and x is large if leafSize == 0 || m <= leafSize { return nil } // determine k where (bb**leafSize)**(2**k) >= sqrt(x) k := 1 for words := leafSize; words < m>>1 && k < len(cacheBase10.table); words <<= 1 { k++ } // reuse and extend existing table of divisors or create new table as appropriate var table []divisor // for b == 10, table overlaps with cacheBase10.table if b == 10 { cacheBase10.Lock() table = cacheBase10.table[0:k] // reuse old table for this conversion } else { table = make([]divisor, k) // create new table for this conversion } // extend table if table[k-1].ndigits == 0 { // add new entries as needed var larger nat for i := 0; i < k; i++ { if table[i].ndigits == 0 { if i == 0 { table[0].bbb = nat(nil).expWW(bb, Word(leafSize)) table[0].ndigits = ndigits * leafSize } else { table[i].bbb = nat(nil).sqr(table[i-1].bbb) table[i].ndigits = 2 * table[i-1].ndigits } // optimization: exploit aggregated extra bits in macro blocks larger = nat(nil).set(table[i].bbb) for mulAddVWW(larger, larger, b, 0) == 0 { table[i].bbb = table[i].bbb.set(larger) table[i].ndigits++ } table[i].nbits = table[i].bbb.bitLen() } } } if b == 10 { cacheBase10.Unlock() } return table }