#!./perl use strict; use warnings; use Config; # to determine nvsize use Test::More tests => 23; use List::Util qw( uniqnum ); is_deeply( [ uniqnum qw( 1 1.0 1E0 2 3 ) ], [ 1, 2, 3 ], 'uniqnum compares numbers' ); is_deeply( [ uniqnum qw( 1 1.1 1.2 1.3 ) ], [ 1, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 ], 'uniqnum distinguishes floats' ); { my @nums = map $_+0.1, 1e7..1e7+5; is_deeply( [ uniqnum @nums ], [ @nums ], 'uniqnum distinguishes large floats' ); my @strings = map "$_", @nums; is_deeply( [ uniqnum @strings ], [ @strings ], 'uniqnum distinguishes large floats (stringified)' ); } my ($uniq_count1, $uniq_count2, $equiv); if($Config{nvsize} == 8) { # NV is either 'double' or 8-byte 'long double' # The 2 values should be unequal - but just in case perl is buggy: $equiv = 1 if 1.4142135623730951 == 1.4142135623730954; $uniq_count1 = uniqnum (1.4142135623730951, 1.4142135623730954 ); $uniq_count2 = uniqnum('1.4142135623730951', '1.4142135623730954' ); } elsif(length(sqrt(2)) > 25) { # NV is either IEEE 'long double' or '__float128' or doubledouble if(1 + (2 ** -1074) != 1) { # NV is doubledouble # The 2 values should be unequal - but just in case perl is buggy: $equiv = 1 if 1 + (2 ** -1074) == 1 + (2 ** - 1073); $uniq_count1 = uniqnum (1 + (2 ** -1074), 1 + (2 ** -1073) ); # The 2 values should be unequal - but just in case perl is buggy: $equiv = 1 if 4.0564819207303340847894502572035e31 == 4.0564819207303340847894502572034e31; $uniq_count2 = uniqnum('4.0564819207303340847894502572035e31', '4.0564819207303340847894502572034e31' ); } else { # NV is either IEEE 'long double' or '__float128' # The 2 values should be unequal - but just in case perl is buggy: $equiv = 1 if 1005.10228292019306452029161597769015 == 1005.1022829201930645202916159776901; $uniq_count1 = uniqnum (1005.10228292019306452029161597769015, 1005.1022829201930645202916159776901 ); $uniq_count2 = uniqnum('1005.10228292019306452029161597769015', '1005.1022829201930645202916159776901' ); } } else { # NV is extended precision 'long double' # The 2 values should be unequal - but just in case perl is buggy: $equiv = 1 if 10.770329614269008063 == 10.7703296142690080625; $uniq_count1 = uniqnum (10.770329614269008063, 10.7703296142690080625 ); $uniq_count2 = uniqnum('10.770329614269008063', '10.7703296142690080625' ); } if($equiv) { is($uniq_count1, 1, 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of high precision floats'); is($uniq_count2, 1, 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of high precision floats (stringified)'); } else { is($uniq_count1, 2, 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of high precision floats'); is($uniq_count2, 2, 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of high precision floats (stringified)'); } SKIP: { skip ('test not relevant for this perl configuration', 1) unless $Config{nvsize} == 8 && $Config{ivsize} == 8; my @in = (~0, ~0 - 1, 18446744073709551614.0, 18014398509481985, 1.8014398509481985e16); my(@correct); # On perl-5.6.2 (and perhaps other old versions), ~0 - 1 is assigned to an NV. # This affects the outcome of the following test, so we need to first determine # whether ~0 - 1 is an NV or a UV: if("$in[1]" eq "1.84467440737096e+19") { # It's an NV and $in[2] is a duplicate of $in[1] @correct = (~0, ~0 - 1, 18014398509481985, 1.8014398509481985e16); } else { # No duplicates in @in @correct = @in; } is_deeply( [ uniqnum @in ], [ @correct ], 'uniqnum correctly compares UV/IVs that overflow NVs' ); } my $ls = 31; # maximum left shift for 32-bit unity if( $Config{ivsize} == 8 ) { $ls = 63; # maximum left shift for 64-bit unity } # Populate @in with UV-NV pairs of equivalent values. # Each of these values is exactly representable as # either a UV or an NV. my @in = (1 << $ls, 2 ** $ls, 1 << ($ls - 3), 2 ** ($ls - 3), 5 << ($ls - 3), 5 * (2 ** ($ls - 3))); my @correct = (1 << $ls, 1 << ($ls - 3), 5 << ($ls -3)); if( $Config{ivsize} == 8 && $Config{nvsize} == 8 ) { # Add some more UV-NV pairs of equivalent values. # Each of these values is exactly representable # as either a UV or an NV. push @in, ( 9007199254740991, 9.007199254740991e+15, 9007199254740992, 9.007199254740992e+15, 9223372036854774784, 9.223372036854774784e+18, 18446744073709549568, 1.8446744073709549568e+19, 18446744073709139968, 1.8446744073709139968e+19, 100000000000262144, 1.00000000000262144e+17, 100000000001310720, 1.0000000000131072e+17, 144115188075593728, 1.44115188075593728e+17, -9007199254740991, -9.007199254740991e+15, -9007199254740992, -9.007199254740992e+15, -9223372036854774784, -9.223372036854774784e+18, -18446744073709549568, -1.8446744073709549568e+19, -18446744073709139968, -1.8446744073709139968e+19, -100000000000262144, -1.00000000000262144e+17, -100000000001310720, -1.0000000000131072e+17, -144115188075593728, -1.44115188075593728e+17 ); push @correct, ( 9007199254740991, 9007199254740992, 9223372036854774784, 18446744073709549568, 18446744073709139968, 100000000000262144, 100000000001310720, 144115188075593728, -9007199254740991, -9007199254740992, -9223372036854774784, -18446744073709549568, -18446744073709139968, -100000000000262144, -100000000001310720, -144115188075593728 ); } # uniqnum should discard each of the NVs as being a # duplicate of the preceding UV. is_deeply( [ uniqnum @in], [ @correct], 'uniqnum correctly compares UV/IVs that don\'t overflow NVs' ); # Hard to know for sure what an Inf is going to be. Lets make one my $Inf = 0 + 1E1000; my $NaN; $Inf **= 1000 while ( $NaN = $Inf - $Inf ) == $NaN; is_deeply( [ uniqnum 0, 1, 12345, $Inf, -$Inf, $NaN, 0, $Inf, $NaN ], [ 0, 1, 12345, $Inf, -$Inf, $NaN ], 'uniqnum preserves the special values of +-Inf and Nan' ); SKIP: { my $maxuint = ~0; my $maxint = ~0 >> 1; my $minint = -(~0 >> 1) - 1; my @nums = ($maxuint, $maxuint-1, -1, $maxint, $minint, 1 ); { use warnings FATAL => 'numeric'; if (eval { "$Inf" + 0 == $Inf }) { push @nums, $Inf; } if (eval { my $nanish = "$NaN" + 0; $nanish != 0 && !$nanish != $NaN; }) { push @nums, $NaN; } } is_deeply( [ uniqnum @nums, 1.0 ], [ @nums ], 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of full integer range' ); my @strs = map "$_", @nums; if($maxuint !~ /\A[0-9]+\z/) { skip( "Perl $] doesn't stringify UV_MAX right ($maxuint)", 1 ); } is_deeply( [ uniqnum @strs, "1.0" ], [ @strs ], 'uniqnum preserves uniqueness of full integer range (stringified)' ); } { my @nums = (6.82132005170133e-38, 62345678); is_deeply( [ uniqnum @nums ], [ @nums ], 'uniqnum keeps uniqueness of numbers that stringify to the same byte pattern as a float' ); } { my $warnings = ""; local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { $warnings .= join "", @_ }; is_deeply( [ uniqnum 0, undef ], [ 0 ], 'uniqnum considers undef and zero equivalent' ); ok( length $warnings, 'uniqnum on undef yields a warning' ); is_deeply( [ uniqnum undef ], [ 0 ], 'uniqnum on undef coerces to zero' ); } is_deeply( [uniqnum 0, -0.0 ], [0], 'uniqnum handles negative zero'); SKIP: { skip ('test not relevant for this perl configuration', 4) unless $Config{ivsize} == 8; # 1e17 is the number beyond which "%.20g" formatting fails on some # 64-bit int perls. # The following 2 tests check that the nearest values (both above # and below that tipping point) are being handled correctly. # 99999999999999984 is the largest 64-bit integer less than 1e17 # that can be expressed exactly as a double is_deeply( [ uniqnum (99999999999999984, 99999999999999984.0) ], [ (99999999999999984) ], 'uniqnum recognizes 99999999999999984 and 99999999999999984.0 as the same' ); is_deeply( [ uniqnum (-99999999999999984, -99999999999999984.0) ], [ (-99999999999999984) ], 'uniqnum recognizes -99999999999999984 and -99999999999999984.0 as the same' ); # 100000000000000016 is the smallest positive 64-bit integer greater than 1e17 # that can be expressed exactly as a double is_deeply( [ uniqnum (100000000000000016, 100000000000000016.0) ], [ (100000000000000016) ], 'uniqnum recognizes 100000000000000016 and 100000000000000016.0 as the same' ); is_deeply( [ uniqnum (-100000000000000016, -100000000000000016.0) ], [ (-100000000000000016) ], 'uniqnum recognizes -100000000000000016 and -100000000000000016.0 as the same' ); } # uniqnum not confused by IV'ified floats SKIP: { # This fails on 5.6 and isn't fixable without breaking a lot of other tests skip 'This perl version gets confused by IVNV dualvars', 1 if $] lt '5.008000'; my @nums = ( 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 ); my $dummy = sprintf "%d", $_ for @nums; # All @nums now have both NOK and IOK but IV=2 in each case is( scalar( uniqnum @nums ), 3, 'uniqnum not confused by dual IV+NV' ); } { package Numify; use overload '0+' => sub { return $_[0]->{num} }; sub new { bless { num => $_[1] }, $_[0] } package main; use Scalar::Util qw( refaddr ); my @nums = map { Numify->new( $_ ) } qw( 2 2 5 ); # is_deeply wants to use eq overloading my @ret = uniqnum @nums; ok( scalar @ret == 2 && refaddr $ret[0] == refaddr $nums[0] && refaddr $ret[1] == refaddr $nums[2], 'uniqnum respects numify overload' ); } { "1 1 2" =~ m/(.) (.) (.)/; is_deeply( [ uniqnum $1, $2, $3 ], [ 1, 2 ], 'uniqnum handles magic' ); }