/*
* Copyright 2017 Google Inc.
*
* Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
* found in the LICENSE file.
*/
#include "src/utils/SkFloatToDecimal.h"
#include "include/core/SkTypes.h"
#include <cfloat>
#include <cmath>
#ifdef SK_DEBUG
#include <limits.h>
#endif
// returns `value * pow(base, e)`, assuming `e` is positive.
static double pow_by_squaring(
double value,
double base,
int e) {
// https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponentiation_by_squaring
SkASSERT(e >
0);
while (
true) {
if (e &
1) {
value *= base;
}
e >>=
1;
if (
0 == e) {
return value;
}
base *= base;
}
}
// Return pow(10.0, e), optimized for common cases.
static double pow10(
int e) {
switch (e) {
case 0:
return 1.
0;
// common cases
case 1:
return 10.
0;
case 2:
return 100.
0;
case 3:
return 1e+
03;
case 4:
return 1e+
04;
case 5:
return 1e+
05;
case 6:
return 1e+
06;
case 7:
return 1e+
07;
case 8:
return 1e+
08;
case 9:
return 1e+
09;
case 10:
return 1e+
10;
case 11:
return 1e+
11;
case 12:
return 1e+
12;
case 13:
return 1e+
13;
case 14:
return 1e+
14;
case 15:
return 1e+
15;
default:
if (e >
15) {
return pow_by_squaring(
1e+
15,
10.
0, e -
15);
}
else {
SkASSERT(e <
0);
return pow_by_squaring(
1.
0,
0.
1, -e);
}
}
}
/** Write a string into output, including a terminating '\0' (for
unit testing). Return strlen(output) (for SkWStream::write) The
resulting string will be in the form /[-]?([0-9]*.)?[0-9]+/ and
sscanf(output, "%f", &x) will return the original value iff the
value is finite. This function accepts all possible input values.
Motivation: "PDF does not support [numbers] in exponential format
(such as 6.02e23)." Otherwise, this function would rely on a
sprintf-type function from the standard library. */
unsigned SkFloatToDecimal(
float value,
char output[kMaximumSkFloatToDecimalLength]) {
/* The longest result is -FLT_MIN.
We serialize it as "-.0000000000000000000000000000000000000117549435"
which has 48 characters plus a terminating '\0'. */
static_assert(kMaximumSkFloatToDecimalLength ==
49,
"");
// 3 = '-', '.', and '\0' characters.
// 9 = number of significant digits
// abs(FLT_MIN_10_EXP) = number of zeros in FLT_MIN
static_assert(kMaximumSkFloatToDecimalLength ==
3 +
9 - FLT_MIN_10_EXP,
"");
/* section C.1 of the PDF1.4 spec (http://goo.gl/0SCswJ) says that
most PDF rasterizers will use fixed-point scalars that lack the
dynamic range of floats. Even if this is the case, I want to
serialize these (uncommon) very small and very large scalar
values with enough precision to allow a floating-point
rasterizer to read them in with perfect accuracy.
Experimentally, rasterizers such as pdfium do seem to benefit
from this. Rasterizers that rely on fixed-point scalars should
gracefully ignore these values that they can not parse. */
char* output_ptr = &output[
0];
const char*
const end = &output[kMaximumSkFloatToDecimalLength -
1];
// subtract one to leave space for '\0'.
/* This function is written to accept any possible input value,
including non-finite values such as INF and NAN. In that case,
we ignore value-correctness and output a syntacticly-valid
number. */
if (value == INFINITY) {
value = FLT_MAX;
// nearest finite float.
}
if (value == -INFINITY) {
value = -FLT_MAX;
// nearest finite float.
}
if (!std::isfinite(value) || value ==
0.
0f) {
// NAN is unsupported in PDF. Always output a valid number.
// Also catch zero here, as a special case.
*output_ptr++ =
'0';
*output_ptr =
'\0';
return static_cast<
unsigned>(output_ptr - output);
}
if (value <
0.
0) {
*output_ptr++ =
'-';
value = -value;
}
SkASSERT(value >=
0.
0f);
int binaryExponent;
(
void)std::frexp(value, &binaryExponent);
static const double kLog2 =
0.
3010299956639812;
// log10(2.0);
int decimalExponent =
static_cast<
int>(std::floor(kLog2 * binaryExponent));
int decimalShift = decimalExponent -
8;
double power = pow10(-decimalShift);
SkASSERT(value * power <= (
double)INT_MAX);
int d =
static_cast<
int>(value * power +
0.
5);
// SkASSERT(value == (float)(d * pow(10.0, decimalShift)));
SkASSERT(d <=
999999999);
if (d >
167772159) {
// floor(pow(10,1+log10(1<<24)))
// need one fewer decimal digits for 24-bit precision.
decimalShift = decimalExponent -
7;
// SkASSERT(power * 0.1 = pow10(-decimalShift));
// recalculate to get rounding right.
d =
static_cast<
int>(value * (power *
0.
1) +
0.
5);
SkASSERT(d <=
99999999);
}
while (d %
10 ==
0) {
d /=
10;
++decimalShift;
}
SkASSERT(d >
0);
// SkASSERT(value == (float)(d * pow(10.0, decimalShift)));
unsigned char buffer[
9];
// decimal value buffer.
int bufferIndex =
0;
do {
buffer[bufferIndex++] = d %
10;
d /=
10;
}
while (d !=
0);
SkASSERT(bufferIndex <= (
int)
sizeof(buffer) && bufferIndex >
0);
if (decimalShift >=
0) {
do {
--bufferIndex;
*output_ptr++ =
'0' + buffer[bufferIndex];
}
while (bufferIndex);
for (
int i =
0; i < decimalShift; ++i) {
*output_ptr++ =
'0';
}
}
else {
int placesBeforeDecimal = bufferIndex + decimalShift;
if (placesBeforeDecimal >
0) {
while (placesBeforeDecimal-- >
0) {
--bufferIndex;
*output_ptr++ =
'0' + buffer[bufferIndex];
}
*output_ptr++ =
'.';
}
else {
*output_ptr++ =
'.';
int placesAfterDecimal = -placesBeforeDecimal;
while (placesAfterDecimal-- >
0) {
*output_ptr++ =
'0';
}
}
while (bufferIndex >
0) {
--bufferIndex;
*output_ptr++ =
'0' + buffer[bufferIndex];
if (output_ptr == end) {
break;
// denormalized: don't need extra precision.
// Note: denormalized numbers will not have the same number of
// significantDigits, but do not need them to round-trip.
}
}
}
SkASSERT(output_ptr <= end);
*output_ptr =
'\0';
return static_cast<
unsigned>(output_ptr - output);
}