apd

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Published: Sep 12, 2017 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 7 Imported by: 0

README

apd

apd is an arbitrary-precision decimal package for Go.

apd implements much of the decimal specification from the General Decimal Arithmetic description. This is the same specification implemented by python’s decimal module and GCC’s decimal extension.

Features

  • Panic-free operation. The math/big types don’t return errors, and instead panic under some conditions that are documented. This requires users to validate the inputs before using them. Meanwhile, we’d like our decimal operations to have more failure modes and more input requirements than the math/big types, so using that API would be difficult. apd instead returns errors when needed.
  • Support for standard functions. sqrt, ln, pow, etc.
  • Accurate and configurable precision. Operations will use enough internal precision to produce a correct result at the requested precision. Precision is set by a "context" structure that accompanies the function arguments, as discussed in the next section.
  • Good performance. Operations will either be fast enough or will produce an error if they will be slow. This prevents edge-case operations from consuming lots of CPU or memory.
  • Condition flags and traps. All operations will report whether their result is exact, is rounded, is over- or under-flowed, is subnormal, or is some other condition. apd supports traps which will trigger an error on any of these conditions. This makes it possible to guarantee exactness in computations, if needed.

apd has two main types. The first is Decimal which holds the values of decimals. It is simple and uses a big.Int with an exponent to describe values. Most operations on Decimals can’t produce errors as they work directly on the underlying big.Int. Notably, however, there are no arithmetic operations on Decimals.

The second main type is Context, which is where all arithmetic operations are defined. A Context describes the precision, range, and some other restrictions during operations. These operations can all produce failures, and so return errors.

Context operations, in addition to errors, return a Condition, which is a bitfield of flags that occurred during an operation. These include overflow, underflow, inexact, rounded, and others. The Traps field of a Context can be set which will produce an error if the corresponding flag occurs. An example of this is given below.

See the examples for some operations that were previously difficult to perform in Go.

Documentation

https://godoc.org/github.com/cockroachdb/apd

Documentation

Overview

Package apd implements arbitrary-precision decimals.

apd implements much of the decimal specification from the General Decimal Arithmetic (http://speleotrove.com/decimal/) description, which is refered to here as GDA. This is the same specification implemented by pythons decimal module (https://docs.python.org/2/library/decimal.html) and GCCs decimal extension.

Features

Panic-free operation. The math/big types don’t return errors, and instead panic under some conditions that are documented. This requires users to validate the inputs before using them. Meanwhile, we’d like our decimal operations to have more failure modes and more input requirements than the math/big types, so using that API would be difficult. apd instead returns errors when needed.

Support for standard functions. sqrt, ln, pow, etc.

Accurate and configurable precision. Operations will use enough internal precision to produce a correct result at the requested precision. Precision is set by a "context" structure that accompanies the function arguments, as discussed in the next section.

Good performance. Operations will either be fast enough or will produce an error if they will be slow. This prevents edge-case operations from consuming lots of CPU or memory.

Condition flags and traps. All operations will report whether their result is exact, is rounded, is over- or under-flowed, is subnormal (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denormal_number), or is some other condition. apd supports traps which will trigger an error on any of these conditions. This makes it possible to guarantee exactness in computations, if needed.

SQL scan and value methods are implemented. This allows the use of Decimals as placeholder parameters and row result Scan destinations.

Usage

apd has two main types. The first is Decimal which holds the values of decimals. It is simple and uses a big.Int with an exponent to describe values. Most operations on Decimals can’t produce errors as they work directly on the underlying big.Int. Notably, however, there are no arithmetic operations on Decimals.

The second main type is Context, which is where all arithmetic operations are defined. A Context describes the precision, range, and some other restrictions during operations. These operations can all produce failures, and so return errors.

Context operations, in addition to errors, return a Condition, which is a bitfield of flags that occurred during an operation. These include overflow, underflow, inexact, rounded, and others. The Traps field of a Context can be set which will produce an error if the corresponding flag occurs. An example of this is given below.

Index

Examples

Constants

View Source
const (

	// MaxExponent is the highest exponent supported. Exponents near this range will
	// perform very slowly (many seconds per operation).
	MaxExponent = 100000
	// MinExponent is the lowest exponent supported with the same limitations as
	// MaxExponent.
	MinExponent = -MaxExponent
)
View Source
const (
	// RoundDown rounds toward 0; truncate.
	RoundDown = "down"
	// RoundHalfUp rounds up if the digits are >= 0.5.
	RoundHalfUp = "half_up"
	// RoundHalfEven rounds up if the digits are > 0.5. If the digits are equal
	// to 0.5, it rounds up if the previous digit is odd, always producing an
	// even digit.
	RoundHalfEven = "half_even"
	// RoundCeiling towards +Inf: rounds up if digits are > 0 and the number
	// is positive.
	RoundCeiling = "ceiling"
	// RoundFloor towards -Inf: rounds up if digits are > 0 and the number
	// is negative.
	RoundFloor = "floor"
	// RoundHalfDown rounds up if the digits are > 0.5.
	RoundHalfDown = "half_down"
	// RoundUp rounds away from 0.
	RoundUp = "up"
	// Round05Up rounds zero or five away from 0; same as round-up, except that
	// rounding up only occurs if the digit to be rounded up is 0 or 5.
	Round05Up = "05up"
)
View Source
const (
	// DefaultTraps is the default trap set used by BaseContext.
	DefaultTraps = SystemOverflow |
		SystemUnderflow |
		Overflow |
		Underflow |
		Subnormal |
		DivisionUndefined |
		DivisionByZero |
		DivisionImpossible |
		InvalidOperation
)

Variables

View Source
var BaseContext = Context{

	Precision: 0,

	MaxExponent: MaxExponent,
	MinExponent: MinExponent,

	Traps: DefaultTraps,
}

BaseContext is a useful default Context. Should not be mutated.

View Source
var (
	// Roundings defines the set of Rounders used by Context. Users may add their
	// own, but modification of this map is not safe during any other parallel
	// Context operations.
	Roundings = map[string]Rounder{
		RoundDown:     roundDown,
		RoundHalfUp:   roundHalfUp,
		RoundHalfEven: roundHalfEven,
		RoundCeiling:  roundCeiling,
		RoundFloor:    roundFloor,
		RoundHalfDown: roundHalfDown,
		RoundUp:       roundUp,
		Round05Up:     round05Up,
	}
)

Functions

func NewFromString

func NewFromString(s string) (*Decimal, Condition, error)

NewFromString creates a new decimal from s. It has no restrictions on exponents or precision.

func NumDigits

func NumDigits(b *big.Int) int64

NumDigits returns the number of decimal digits of b.

Types

type Condition

type Condition uint32

Condition holds condition flags.

const (
	// SystemOverflow is raised when an exponent is greater than MaxExponent.
	SystemOverflow Condition = 1 << iota
	// SystemUnderflow is raised when an exponent is less than MinExponent.
	SystemUnderflow
	// Overflow is raised when the exponent of a result is too large to be
	// represented.
	Overflow
	// Underflow is raised when a result is both subnormal and inexact.
	Underflow
	// Inexact is raised when a result is not exact (one or more non-zero
	// coefficient digits were discarded during rounding).
	Inexact
	// Subnormal is raised when a result is subnormal (its adjusted exponent is
	// less than Emin), before any rounding.
	Subnormal
	// Rounded is raised when a result has been rounded (that is, some zero or
	// non-zero coefficient digits were discarded).
	Rounded
	// DivisionUndefined is raised when both division operands are 0.
	DivisionUndefined
	// DivisionByZero is raised when a non-zero dividend is divided by zero.
	DivisionByZero
	// DivisionImpossible is raised when integer division cannot be exactly
	// represented with the given precision.
	DivisionImpossible
	// InvalidOperation is raised when a result would be undefined or impossible.
	InvalidOperation
	// Clamped is raised when the exponent of a result has been altered or
	// constrained in order to fit the constraints of the Decimal representation.
	Clamped
)

func (Condition) Any

func (r Condition) Any() bool

Any returns true if any flag is true.

func (Condition) Clamped

func (r Condition) Clamped() bool

Clamped returns true if the Clamped flag is set.

func (Condition) DivisionByZero

func (r Condition) DivisionByZero() bool

DivisionByZero returns true if the DivisionByZero flag is set.

func (Condition) DivisionImpossible

func (r Condition) DivisionImpossible() bool

DivisionImpossible returns true if the DivisionImpossible flag is set.

func (Condition) DivisionUndefined

func (r Condition) DivisionUndefined() bool

DivisionUndefined returns true if the DivisionUndefined flag is set.

func (Condition) GoError

func (r Condition) GoError(traps Condition) (Condition, error)

GoError converts r to an error based on the given traps and returns r. Traps are the conditions which will trigger an error result if the corresponding Flag condition occurred.

func (Condition) Inexact

func (r Condition) Inexact() bool

Inexact returns true if the Inexact flag is set.

func (Condition) InvalidOperation

func (r Condition) InvalidOperation() bool

InvalidOperation returns true if the InvalidOperation flag is set.

func (Condition) Overflow

func (r Condition) Overflow() bool

Overflow returns true if the Overflow flag is set.

func (Condition) Rounded

func (r Condition) Rounded() bool

Rounded returns true if the Rounded flag is set.

func (Condition) String

func (r Condition) String() string

func (Condition) Subnormal

func (r Condition) Subnormal() bool

Subnormal returns true if the Subnormal flag is set.

func (Condition) SystemOverflow

func (r Condition) SystemOverflow() bool

SystemOverflow returns true if the SystemOverflow flag is set.

func (Condition) SystemUnderflow

func (r Condition) SystemUnderflow() bool

SystemUnderflow returns true if the SystemUnderflow flag is set.

func (Condition) Underflow

func (r Condition) Underflow() bool

Underflow returns true if the Underflow flag is set.

type Context

type Context struct {
	// Precision is the number of places to round during rounding; this is
	// effectively the total number of digits (before and after the decimal
	// point).
	Precision uint32
	// MaxExponent specifies the largest effective exponent. The
	// effective exponent is the value of the Decimal in scientific notation. That
	// is, for 10e2, the effective exponent is 3 (1.0e3). Zero (0) is not a special
	// value; it does not disable this check.
	MaxExponent int32
	// MinExponent is similar to MaxExponent, but for the smallest effective
	// exponent.
	MinExponent int32
	// Traps are the conditions which will trigger an error result if the
	// corresponding Flag condition occurred.
	Traps Condition
	// Rounding specifies the Rounder to use during rounding. RoundHalfUp is used if
	// empty or not present in Roundings.
	Rounding string
}

Context maintains options for Decimal operations. It can safely be used concurrently, but not modified concurrently. Arguments for any method can safely be used as both result and operand.

Example (Inexact)

ExampleInexact demonstrates how to detect inexact operations.

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/cockroachdb/apd"
)

func main() {
	d := apd.New(27, 0)
	three := apd.New(3, 0)
	c := apd.BaseContext.WithPrecision(5)
	for {
		res, err := c.Quo(d, d, three)
		fmt.Printf("d: %7s, inexact: %5v, err: %v\n", d, res.Inexact(), err)
		if err != nil {
			return
		}
		if res.Inexact() {
			return
		}
	}
}
Output:

d:       9, inexact: false, err: <nil>
d:       3, inexact: false, err: <nil>
d:       1, inexact: false, err: <nil>
d: 0.33333, inexact:  true, err: <nil>
Example (Overflow)

ExampleOverflow demonstrates how to detect or error on overflow.

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/cockroachdb/apd"
)

func main() {
	// Create a context that will overflow at 1e3.
	c := apd.Context{
		MaxExponent: 2,
		Traps:       apd.Overflow,
	}
	one := apd.New(1, 0)
	d := apd.New(997, 0)
	for {
		res, err := c.Add(d, d, one)
		fmt.Printf("d: %8s, overflow: %5v, err: %v\n", d, res.Overflow(), err)
		if err != nil {
			return
		}
	}
}
Output:

d:      998, overflow: false, err: <nil>
d:      999, overflow: false, err: <nil>
d: Infinity, overflow:  true, err: overflow

func (*Context) Abs

func (c *Context) Abs(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Abs sets d to |x| (the absolute value of x).

func (*Context) Add

func (c *Context) Add(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Add sets d to the sum x+y.

func (*Context) Cbrt

func (c *Context) Cbrt(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Cbrt sets d to the cube root of x.

func (*Context) Ceil

func (c *Context) Ceil(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Ceil sets d to the smallest integer >= x.

func (*Context) Cmp

func (c *Context) Cmp(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Cmp compares x and y and sets d to:

-1 if x <  y
 0 if x == y
+1 if x >  y

This comparison respects the normal rules of special values (like NaN), and does not compare them.

func (*Context) Exp

func (c *Context) Exp(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Exp sets d = e**x.

func (*Context) Floor

func (c *Context) Floor(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Floor sets d to the largest integer <= x.

func (*Context) Ln

func (c *Context) Ln(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Ln sets d to the natural log of x.

func (*Context) Log10

func (c *Context) Log10(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Log10 sets d to the base 10 log of x.

func (*Context) Mul

func (c *Context) Mul(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Mul sets d to the product x*y.

func (*Context) Neg

func (c *Context) Neg(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Neg sets d to -x.

func (*Context) NewFromString

func (c *Context) NewFromString(s string) (*Decimal, Condition, error)

NewFromString creates a new decimal from s. The returned Decimal has its exponents restricted by the context and its value rounded if it contains more digits than the context's precision.

func (*Context) Pow

func (c *Context) Pow(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Pow sets d = x**y.

func (*Context) Quantize

func (c *Context) Quantize(d, x *Decimal, exp int32) (Condition, error)

Quantize adjusts and rounds x as necessary so it is represented with exponent exp and stores the result in d.

Example
package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/cockroachdb/apd"
)

func main() {
	input, _, _ := apd.NewFromString("123.45")
	output := new(apd.Decimal)
	c := apd.BaseContext.WithPrecision(10)
	for i := int32(-3); i <= 3; i++ {
		res, _ := c.Quantize(output, input, i)
		fmt.Printf("%2v: %s", i, output)
		if res != 0 {
			fmt.Printf(" (%s)", res)
		}
		fmt.Println()
	}
}
Output:

-3: 123.450
-2: 123.45
-1: 123.5 (inexact, rounded)
 0: 123 (inexact, rounded)
 1: 1.2E+2 (inexact, rounded)
 2: 1E+2 (inexact, rounded)
 3: 0E+3 (inexact, rounded)

func (*Context) Quo

func (c *Context) Quo(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Quo sets d to the quotient x/y for y != 0. c.Precision must be > 0. If an exact division is required, use a context with high precision and verify it was exact by checking the Inexact flag on the return Condition.

func (*Context) QuoInteger

func (c *Context) QuoInteger(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

QuoInteger sets d to the integer part of the quotient x/y. If the result cannot fit in d.Precision digits, an error is returned.

func (*Context) Reduce

func (c *Context) Reduce(d, x *Decimal) (int, Condition, error)

Reduce sets d to x with all trailing zeros removed and returns the number of zeros removed.

func (*Context) Rem

func (c *Context) Rem(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Rem sets d to the remainder part of the quotient x/y. If the integer part cannot fit in d.Precision digits, an error is returned.

func (*Context) Round

func (c *Context) Round(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Round sets d to rounded x, rounded to the precision specified by c. If c has zero precision, no rounding will occur. If c has no Rounding specified, RoundHalfUp is used.

func (*Context) RoundToIntegralExact

func (c *Context) RoundToIntegralExact(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

RoundToIntegralExact sets d to integral value of x.

Example

ExampleRoundToIntegralExact demonstrates how to use RoundToIntegralExact to check if a number is an integer or not. Note the variations between integer (which allows zeros after the decimal point) and strict (which does not). See the documentation on Inexact and Rounded.

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/cockroachdb/apd"
)

func main() {
	inputs := []string{
		"123.4",
		"123.0",
		"123",
		"12E1",
		"120E-1",
		"120E-2",
	}
	for _, input := range inputs {
		d, _, _ := apd.NewFromString(input)
		res, _ := apd.BaseContext.RoundToIntegralExact(d, d)
		integer := !res.Inexact()
		strict := !res.Rounded()
		fmt.Printf("input: % 6s, output: %3s, integer: %5t, strict: %5t, res:", input, d, integer, strict)
		if res != 0 {
			fmt.Printf(" %s", res)
		}
		fmt.Println()
	}
}
Output:

input:  123.4, output: 123, integer: false, strict: false, res: inexact, rounded
input:  123.0, output: 123, integer:  true, strict: false, res: rounded
input:    123, output: 123, integer:  true, strict:  true, res:
input:   12E1, output: 120, integer:  true, strict:  true, res:
input: 120E-1, output:  12, integer:  true, strict: false, res: rounded
input: 120E-2, output:   1, integer: false, strict: false, res: inexact, rounded

func (*Context) RoundToIntegralValue

func (c *Context) RoundToIntegralValue(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

RoundToIntegralValue sets d to integral value of x. Inexact and Rounded flags are ignored and removed.

func (*Context) SetString

func (c *Context) SetString(d *Decimal, s string) (*Decimal, Condition, error)

SetString sets d to s and returns d. The returned Decimal has its exponents restricted by the context and its value rounded if it contains more digits than the context's precision.

func (*Context) Sqrt

func (c *Context) Sqrt(d, x *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Sqrt sets d to the square root of x. Sqrt uses the Babylonian method for computing the square root, which uses O(log p) steps for p digits of precision.

func (*Context) Sub

func (c *Context) Sub(d, x, y *Decimal) (Condition, error)

Sub sets d to the difference x-y.

func (*Context) WithPrecision

func (c *Context) WithPrecision(p uint32) *Context

WithPrecision returns a copy of c but with the specified precision.

type Decimal

type Decimal struct {
	Form     Form
	Negative bool
	Exponent int32
	Coeff    big.Int
}

Decimal is an arbitrary-precision decimal. Its value is:

Negative × Coeff × 10**Exponent

Coeff must be positive. If it is negative results may be incorrect and apd may panic.

func New

func New(coeff int64, exponent int32) *Decimal

New creates a new decimal with the given coefficient and exponent.

func NewWithBigInt

func NewWithBigInt(coeff *big.Int, exponent int32) *Decimal

NewWithBigInt creates a new decimal with the given coefficient and exponent.

func (*Decimal) Abs

func (d *Decimal) Abs(x *Decimal) *Decimal

Abs sets d to |x| and returns d.

func (*Decimal) Append

func (d *Decimal) Append(buf []byte, fmt byte) []byte

Append appends to buf the string form of the decimal number d, as generated by d.Text, and returns the extended buffer.

func (*Decimal) Cmp

func (d *Decimal) Cmp(x *Decimal) int

Cmp compares d and x and returns:

-1 if d <  x
 0 if d == x
+1 if d >  x
undefined if d or x are NaN

func (*Decimal) CmpTotal

func (d *Decimal) CmpTotal(x *Decimal) int

CmpTotal compares d and x using their abstract representation rather than their numerical value. A total ordering is defined for all possible abstract representations, as described below. If the first operand is lower in the total order than the second operand then the result is -1, if the operands have the same abstract representation then the result is 0, and if the first operand is higher in the total order than the second operand then the result is 1.

Numbers (representations which are not NaNs) are ordered such that a larger numerical value is higher in the ordering. If two representations have the same numerical value then the exponent is taken into account; larger (more positive) exponents are higher in the ordering.

For example, the following values are ordered from lowest to highest. Note the difference in ordering between 1.2300 and 1.23.

-NaN
-NaNSignaling
-Infinity
-127
-1.00
-1
-0.000
-0
0
1.2300
1.23
1E+9
Infinity
NaNSignaling
NaN

func (*Decimal) Float64

func (d *Decimal) Float64() (float64, error)

Float64 returns the float64 representation of x. This conversion may lose data (see strconv.ParseFloat for caveats).

func (*Decimal) Format

func (d *Decimal) Format(s fmt.State, format rune)

Format implements fmt.Formatter. It accepts many of the regular formats for floating-point numbers ('e', 'E', 'f', 'F', 'g', 'G') as well as 's' and 'v', which are handled like 'G'. Format also supports the output field width, as well as the format flags '+' and ' ' for sign control, '0' for space or zero padding, and '-' for left or right justification. It does not support precision. See the fmt package for details.

func (*Decimal) Int64

func (d *Decimal) Int64() (int64, error)

Int64 returns the int64 representation of x. If x cannot be represented in an int64, an error is returned.

func (*Decimal) IsZero

func (d *Decimal) IsZero() bool

IsZero returns true if d == 0 or -0.

func (*Decimal) MarshalText

func (d *Decimal) MarshalText() ([]byte, error)

MarshalText implements the encoding.TextMarshaler interface.

func (*Decimal) Modf

func (d *Decimal) Modf(integ, frac *Decimal)

Modf sets integ to the integral part of d and frac to the fractional part such that d = integ+frac. If d is negative, both integ or frac will be either 0 or negative. integ.Exponent will be >= 0; frac.Exponent will be <= 0. Either argument can be nil, preventing it from being set.

func (*Decimal) Neg

func (d *Decimal) Neg(x *Decimal) *Decimal

Neg sets d to -x and returns d.

func (*Decimal) NumDigits

func (d *Decimal) NumDigits() int64

NumDigits returns the number of decimal digits of d.Coeff.

func (*Decimal) Reduce

func (d *Decimal) Reduce(x *Decimal) (*Decimal, int)

Reduce sets d to x with all trailing zeros removed and returns d and the number of zeros removed.

func (*Decimal) Scan

func (d *Decimal) Scan(src interface{}) error

Scan implements the database/sql.Scanner interface. It supports string, []byte, int64, float64.

func (*Decimal) Set

func (d *Decimal) Set(x *Decimal) *Decimal

Set sets d's fields to the values of x and returns d.

func (*Decimal) SetCoefficient

func (d *Decimal) SetCoefficient(x int64) *Decimal

SetCoefficient sets d's coefficient and negative value to x, its Form to Finite, and returns d. The exponent is not changed.

func (*Decimal) SetExponent

func (d *Decimal) SetExponent(x int32) *Decimal

SetExponent sets d's Exponent value to x and returns d.

func (*Decimal) SetFloat64

func (d *Decimal) SetFloat64(f float64) (*Decimal, error)

SetFloat64 sets d's Coefficient and Exponent to x and returns d. d will hold the exact value of f.

func (*Decimal) SetInt64

func (d *Decimal) SetInt64(x int64) *Decimal

SetInt64 sets d to x and returns d.

func (*Decimal) SetString

func (d *Decimal) SetString(s string) (*Decimal, Condition, error)

SetString sets d to s and returns d. It has no restrictions on exponents or precision.

func (*Decimal) Sign

func (d *Decimal) Sign() int

Sign returns, if d is Finite:

-1 if d <  0
 0 if d == 0 or -0
+1 if d >  0

Otherwise (if d is Infinite or NaN):

-1 if d.Negative == true
+1 if d.Negative == false

func (*Decimal) String

func (d *Decimal) String() string

String formats x like x.Text('G'). It matches the to-scientific-string conversion of the GDA spec.

func (*Decimal) Text

func (d *Decimal) Text(format byte) string

Text converts the floating-point number x to a string according to the given format. The format is one of:

'e'	-d.dddde±dd, decimal exponent, exponent digits
'E'	-d.ddddE±dd, decimal exponent, exponent digits
'f'	-ddddd.dddd, no exponent
'g'	like 'e' for large exponents, like 'f' otherwise
'G'	like 'E' for large exponents, like 'f' otherwise

If format is a different character, Text returns a "%" followed by the unrecognized.Format character. The 'f' format has the possibility of displaying precision that is not present in the Decimal when it appends zeros. All other formats always show the exact precision of the Decimal.

func (*Decimal) UnmarshalText

func (d *Decimal) UnmarshalText(b []byte) error

UnmarshalText implements the encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface.

func (Decimal) Value

func (d Decimal) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the database/sql/driver.Valuer interface. It converts d to a string.

type ErrDecimal

type ErrDecimal struct {
	Ctx *Context
	// Flags are the accumulated flags from operations.
	Flags Condition
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

ErrDecimal performs operations on decimals and collects errors during operations. If an error is already set, the operation is skipped. Designed to be used for many operations in a row, with a single error check at the end.

Example
package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/cockroachdb/apd"
)

func main() {
	c := apd.BaseContext.WithPrecision(5)
	ed := apd.MakeErrDecimal(c)
	d := apd.New(10, 0)
	fmt.Printf("%s, err: %v\n", d, ed.Err())
	ed.Add(d, d, apd.New(2, 1)) // add 20
	fmt.Printf("%s, err: %v\n", d, ed.Err())
	ed.Quo(d, d, apd.New(0, 0)) // divide by zero
	fmt.Printf("%s, err: %v\n", d, ed.Err())
	ed.Sub(d, d, apd.New(1, 0)) // attempt to subtract 1
	// The subtraction doesn't occur and doesn't change the error.
	fmt.Printf("%s, err: %v\n", d, ed.Err())
}
Output:

10, err: <nil>
30, err: <nil>
Infinity, err: division by zero
Infinity, err: division by zero

func MakeErrDecimal

func MakeErrDecimal(c *Context) ErrDecimal

MakeErrDecimal creates a ErrDecimal with given context.

func (*ErrDecimal) Abs

func (e *ErrDecimal) Abs(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Abs performs e.Ctx.Abs(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Add

func (e *ErrDecimal) Add(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Add performs e.Ctx.Add(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Ceil

func (e *ErrDecimal) Ceil(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Ceil performs e.Ctx.Ceil(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Err

func (e *ErrDecimal) Err() error

Err returns the first error encountered or the context's trap error if present.

func (*ErrDecimal) Exp

func (e *ErrDecimal) Exp(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Exp performs e.Ctx.Exp(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Floor

func (e *ErrDecimal) Floor(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Floor performs e.Ctx.Floor(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Int64

func (e *ErrDecimal) Int64(d *Decimal) int64

Int64 returns 0 if err is set. Otherwise returns d.Int64().

func (*ErrDecimal) Ln

func (e *ErrDecimal) Ln(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Ln performs e.Ctx.Ln(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Log10

func (e *ErrDecimal) Log10(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Log10 performs d.Log10(x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Mul

func (e *ErrDecimal) Mul(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Mul performs e.Ctx.Mul(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Neg

func (e *ErrDecimal) Neg(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Neg performs e.Ctx.Neg(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Pow

func (e *ErrDecimal) Pow(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Pow performs e.Ctx.Pow(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Quantize

func (e *ErrDecimal) Quantize(d, v *Decimal, exp int32) *Decimal

Quantize performs e.Ctx.Quantize(d, v, exp) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Quo

func (e *ErrDecimal) Quo(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Quo performs e.Ctx.Quo(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) QuoInteger

func (e *ErrDecimal) QuoInteger(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

QuoInteger performs e.Ctx.QuoInteger(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Reduce

func (e *ErrDecimal) Reduce(d, x *Decimal) (int, *Decimal)

Reduce performs e.Ctx.Reduce(d, x) and returns the number of zeros removed and d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Rem

func (e *ErrDecimal) Rem(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Rem performs e.Ctx.Rem(d, x, y) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Round

func (e *ErrDecimal) Round(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Round performs e.Ctx.Round(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) RoundToIntegralExact

func (e *ErrDecimal) RoundToIntegralExact(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

RoundToIntegralExact performs e.Ctx.RoundToIntegralExact(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) RoundToIntegralValue

func (e *ErrDecimal) RoundToIntegralValue(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

RoundToIntegralValue performs e.Ctx.RoundToIntegralValue(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Sqrt

func (e *ErrDecimal) Sqrt(d, x *Decimal) *Decimal

Sqrt performs e.Ctx.Sqrt(d, x) and returns d.

func (*ErrDecimal) Sub

func (e *ErrDecimal) Sub(d, x, y *Decimal) *Decimal

Sub performs e.Ctx.Sub(d, x, y) and returns d.

type Form

type Form int

Form specifies the form of a Decimal.

const (

	// Finite is the finite form.
	Finite Form = iota
	// Infinite is the infinite form.
	Infinite
	// NaNSignaling is the signaling NaN form. It will always raise the
	// InvalidOperation condition during an operation.
	NaNSignaling
	// NaN is the NaN form.
	NaN
)

func (Form) String

func (i Form) String() string

type NullDecimal

type NullDecimal struct {
	Decimal Decimal
	Valid   bool // Valid is true if Decimal is not NULL
}

NullDecimal represents a string that may be null. NullDecimal implements the database/sql.Scanner interface so it can be used as a scan destination:

var d NullDecimal
err := db.QueryRow("SELECT num FROM foo WHERE id=?", id).Scan(&d)
...
if d.Valid {
   // use d.Decimal
} else {
   // NULL value
}

func (*NullDecimal) Scan

func (nd *NullDecimal) Scan(value interface{}) error

Scan implements the database/sql.Scanner interface.

func (NullDecimal) Value

func (nd NullDecimal) Value() (driver.Value, error)

Value implements the database/sql/driver.Valuer interface.

type Rounder

type Rounder func(result *big.Int, neg bool, half int) bool

Rounder defines a function that returns true if 1 should be added to the absolute value of a number being rounded. result is the result to which the 1 would be added. neg is true if the number is negative. half is -1 if the discarded digits are < 0.5, 0 if = 0.5, or 1 if > 0.5.

func (Rounder) Round

func (r Rounder) Round(c *Context, d, x *Decimal) Condition

Round sets d to rounded x.

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