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Tip revision: af358ef3998dab057829a83a00f0cd92fc7a9978 authored by Benjamin Peterson on 26 November 2014, 00:27:24 UTC
2.7.9rc1
Tip revision: af358ef
strtod.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

#include "pyconfig.h"

/* comp.sources.misc strtod(), as posted in comp.lang.tcl,
   with bugfix for "123000.0" and acceptance of space after 'e' sign nuked.

   ************************************************************
   * YOU MUST EDIT THE MACHINE-DEPENDENT DEFINITIONS BELOW!!! *
   ************************************************************
*/

/*  File   : stdtod.c (Modified version of str2dbl.c)
    Author : Richard A. O'Keefe @ Quintus Computer Systems, Inc.
    Updated: Tuesday August 2nd, 1988
    Defines: double strtod (char *str, char**ptr)
*/

/*  This is an implementation of the strtod() function described in the
    System V manuals, with a different name to avoid linker problems.
    All that str2dbl() does itself is check that the argument is well-formed
    and is in range.  It leaves the work of conversion to atof(), which is
    assumed to exist and deliver correct results (if they can be represented).

    There are two reasons why this should be provided to the net:
    (a) some UNIX systems do not yet have strtod(), or do not have it
    available in the BSD "universe" (but they do have atof()).
    (b) some of the UNIX systems that *do* have it get it wrong.
    (some crash with large arguments, some assign the wrong *ptr value).
    There is a reason why *we* are providing it: we need a correct version
    of strtod(), and if we give this one away maybe someone will look for
    mistakes in it and fix them for us (:-).
*/

/*  The following constants are machine-specific.  MD{MIN,MAX}EXPT are
    integers and MD{MIN,MAX}FRAC are strings such that
    0.${MDMAXFRAC}e${MDMAXEXPT} is the largest representable double,
    0.${MDMINFRAC}e${MDMINEXPT} is the smallest representable +ve double
    MD{MIN,MAX}FRAC must not have any trailing zeros.
    The values here are for IEEE-754 64-bit floats.
    It is not perfectly clear to me whether an IEEE infinity should be
    returned for overflow, nor what a portable way of writing one is,
    so HUGE is just 0.MAXFRAC*10**MAXEXPT (this seems still to be the
    UNIX convention).

    I do know about <values.h>, but the whole point of this file is that
    we can't always trust that stuff to be there or to be correct.
*/
static  int     MDMINEXPT       = -323;
static  char    MDMINFRAC[]     = "494065645841246544";
static  double  ZERO            = 0.0;

static  int     MDMAXEXPT       = 309;
static  char    MDMAXFRAC[]     = "17976931348623157";
static  double  HUGE            = 1.7976931348623157e308;

extern  double  atof(const char *);             /* Only called when result known to be ok */

#ifdef HAVE_ERRNO_H
#include <errno.h>
#endif
extern  int     errno;

double strtod(char *str, char **ptr)
{
    int sign, scale, dotseen;
    int esign, expt;
    char *save;
    register char *sp, *dp;
    register int c;
    char *buforg, *buflim;
    char buffer[64];                    /* 45-digit significant + */
                    /* 13-digit exponent */
    sp = str;
    while (*sp == ' ') sp++;
    sign = 1;
    if (*sp == '-') sign -= 2, sp++;
    dotseen = 0, scale = 0;
    dp = buffer;
    *dp++ = '0'; *dp++ = '.';
    buforg = dp, buflim = buffer+48;
    for (save = sp; (c = *sp); sp++)
        if (c == '.') {
        if (dotseen) break;
        dotseen++;
        } else
        if ((unsigned)(c-'0') > (unsigned)('9'-'0')) {
        break;
        } else
        if (c == '0') {
        if (dp != buforg) {
            /* This is not the first digit, so we want to keep it */
            if (dp < buflim) *dp++ = c;
            if (!dotseen) scale++;
        } else {
            /* No non-zero digits seen yet */
            /* If a . has been seen, scale must be adjusted */
            if (dotseen) scale--;
        }
        } else {
        /* This is a nonzero digit, so we want to keep it */
        if (dp < buflim) *dp++ = c;
        /* If it precedes a ., scale must be adjusted */
        if (!dotseen) scale++;
        }
    if (sp == save) {
        if (ptr) *ptr = str;
        errno = EDOM;                   /* what should this be? */
        return ZERO;
    }

    while (dp > buforg && dp[-1] == '0') --dp;
    if (dp == buforg) *dp++ = '0';
    *dp = '\0';
    /*  Now the contents of buffer are
        +--+--------+-+--------+
        |0.|fraction|\|leftover|
        +--+--------+-+--------+
                     ^dp points here
        where fraction begins with 0 iff it is "0", and has at most
        45 digits in it, and leftover is at least 16 characters.
    */
    save = sp, expt = 0, esign = 1;
    do {
        c = *sp++;
        if (c != 'e' && c != 'E') break;
        c = *sp++;
        if (c == '-') esign -= 2, c = *sp++; else
        if (c == '+' /* || c == ' ' */ ) c = *sp++;
        if ((unsigned)(c-'0') > (unsigned)('9'-'0')) break;
        while (c == '0') c = *sp++;
        for (; (unsigned)(c-'0') <= (unsigned)('9'-'0'); c = *sp++)
        expt = expt*10 + c-'0';
        if (esign < 0) expt = -expt;
        save = sp-1;
    } while (0);
    if (ptr) *ptr = save;
    expt += scale;
    /*  Now the number is sign*0.fraction*10**expt  */
    errno = ERANGE;
    if (expt > MDMAXEXPT) {
        return HUGE*sign;
    } else
    if (expt == MDMAXEXPT) {
        if (strcmp(buforg, MDMAXFRAC) > 0) return HUGE*sign;
    } else
    if (expt < MDMINEXPT) {
        return ZERO*sign;
    } else
    if (expt == MDMINEXPT) {
        if (strcmp(buforg, MDMINFRAC) < 0) return ZERO*sign;
    }
    /*  We have now established that the number can be  */
    /*  represented without overflow or underflow  */
    (void) sprintf(dp, "E%d", expt);
    errno = 0;
    return atof(buffer)*sign;
}
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