| /* Float object interface */ | |
| /* | |
| PyFloatObject represents a (double precision) floating point number. | |
| */ | |
| extern "C" { | |
| typedef struct { | |
| PyObject_HEAD | |
| double ob_fval; | |
| } PyFloatObject; | |
| PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject) PyFloat_Type; | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) PyFloat_GetMax(void); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) PyFloat_GetMin(void); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyFloat_GetInfo(void); | |
| /* Return Python float from string PyObject. */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyFloat_FromString(PyObject*); | |
| /* Return Python float from C double. */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PyFloat_FromDouble(double); | |
| /* Extract C double from Python float. The macro version trades safety for | |
| speed. */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) PyFloat_AsDouble(PyObject *); | |
| /* _PyFloat_{Pack,Unpack}{4,8} | |
| * | |
| * The struct and pickle (at least) modules need an efficient platform- | |
| * independent way to store floating-point values as byte strings. | |
| * The Pack routines produce a string from a C double, and the Unpack | |
| * routines produce a C double from such a string. The suffix (4 or 8) | |
| * specifies the number of bytes in the string. | |
| * | |
| * On platforms that appear to use (see _PyFloat_Init()) IEEE-754 formats | |
| * these functions work by copying bits. On other platforms, the formats the | |
| * 4- byte format is identical to the IEEE-754 single precision format, and | |
| * the 8-byte format to the IEEE-754 double precision format, although the | |
| * packing of INFs and NaNs (if such things exist on the platform) isn't | |
| * handled correctly, and attempting to unpack a string containing an IEEE | |
| * INF or NaN will raise an exception. | |
| * | |
| * On non-IEEE platforms with more precision, or larger dynamic range, than | |
| * 754 supports, not all values can be packed; on non-IEEE platforms with less | |
| * precision, or smaller dynamic range, not all values can be unpacked. What | |
| * happens in such cases is partly accidental (alas). | |
| */ | |
| /* The pack routines write 2, 4 or 8 bytes, starting at p. le is a bool | |
| * argument, true if you want the string in little-endian format (exponent | |
| * last, at p+1, p+3 or p+7), false if you want big-endian format (exponent | |
| * first, at p). | |
| * Return value: 0 if all is OK, -1 if error (and an exception is | |
| * set, most likely OverflowError). | |
| * There are two problems on non-IEEE platforms: | |
| * 1): What this does is undefined if x is a NaN or infinity. | |
| * 2): -0.0 and +0.0 produce the same string. | |
| */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyFloat_Pack2(double x, unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyFloat_Pack4(double x, unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyFloat_Pack8(double x, unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| /* The unpack routines read 2, 4 or 8 bytes, starting at p. le is a bool | |
| * argument, true if the string is in little-endian format (exponent | |
| * last, at p+1, p+3 or p+7), false if big-endian (exponent first, at p). | |
| * Return value: The unpacked double. On error, this is -1.0 and | |
| * PyErr_Occurred() is true (and an exception is set, most likely | |
| * OverflowError). Note that on a non-IEEE platform this will refuse | |
| * to unpack a string that represents a NaN or infinity. | |
| */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) _PyFloat_Unpack2(const unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) _PyFloat_Unpack4(const unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(double) _PyFloat_Unpack8(const unsigned char *p, int le); | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyFloat_DebugMallocStats(FILE* out); | |
| /* Format the object based on the format_spec, as defined in PEP 3101 | |
| (Advanced String Formatting). */ | |
| PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyFloat_FormatAdvancedWriter( | |
| _PyUnicodeWriter *writer, | |
| PyObject *obj, | |
| PyObject *format_spec, | |
| Py_ssize_t start, | |
| Py_ssize_t end); | |
| } | |