package decimal
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doc/decimal/Decimal/index.html
Module DecimalSource
This is an implementation of decimal floating point arithmetic based on the General Decimal Arithmetic Specification:
http://speleotrove.com/decimal/decarith.html
and IEEE standard 854-1987:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_854-1987
Decimal floating point has finite precision with arbitrarily large bounds. The purpose of this module is to support arithmetic using familiar "schoolhouse" rules and to avoid some of the tricky representation issues associated with binary floating point. The package is especially useful for financial applications or for contexts where users have expectations that are at odds with binary floating point (for instance, in binary floating point, 1.00 mod 0.1 gives 0.09999999999999995 instead of 0.0; Decimal.(of_string "1.00" mod of_string "0.1") returns the expected "0.00").
Signals are used to control the behaviour of the decimal functions under exceptional conditions.
Settings that control precision, rounding mode, exceptional behaviour, etc.
A decimal floating-point number. All operations are done in radix (base) 10.
include Map.OrderedType with type t := t
A total ordering function over the keys. This is a two-argument function f such that f e1 e2 is zero if the keys e1 and e2 are equal, f e1 e2 is strictly negative if e1 is smaller than e2, and f e1 e2 is strictly positive if e1 is greater than e2. Example: a suitable ordering function is the generic structural comparison function Stdlib.compare.
include Hashtbl.HashedType with type t := t
A hashing function on keys. It must be such that if two keys are equal according to equal, then they have identical hash values as computed by hash. Examples: suitable (equal, hash) pairs for arbitrary key types include
- (
(=),hash) for comparing objects by structure (provided objects do not contain floats) - (
(fun x y -> compare x y = 0),hash) for comparing objects by structure and handlingStdlib.nancorrectly - (
(==),hash) for comparing objects by physical equality (e.g. for mutable or cyclic objects).
of_string ?context str is str parsed into a decimal value with context (or the default context if none provided).
Note that a convenience syntax, e.g. 1.1m, is provided to write decimal literals in source code. See the readme for instructions on how to use it via the ppx_decimal PPX.
of_yojson json is the result of parsing a JSON value into a decimal:
- integer is parsed
- float is parsed with the usual caveat about float imprecision
- string is parsed
- anything else fails to parse
of_float ?context float is the decimal representation of the float. This suffers from floating-point precision loss; the other constructors should be preferred.
to_string ?format ?context t is the string representation of t. format is optional, with the options being:
`standard: the default. Numbers are represented as decimals until 6 decimal points, at which point they are represented as scientific notation`eng: engineering notation, where the exponent of 10 is always a multiple of 3`plain: 'normal' decimal notation
to_yojson t is the JSON representation of decimal value t. Note that it is encoded as a string to avoid losing precision.
to_float ?context decimal is the float representation of the decimal. This suffers from floating-point precision loss; the other serializations should be preferred.
to_tuple t is a representation of the internals of t as a triple of (sign, coefficient, exponent) for debugging purposes.
abs ?round ?context t is the absolute value of t, rounded only if round is true.
adjusted t is the exponent of t after adjusting its coefficient (significand) into standard form, i.e. scientific notation.
E.g., Decimal.("314" |> of_string |> adjusted) is 2 because it is 3.14e2 in standard form. And, Decimal.("42e-10" |> of_string |> adjusted) is -9 because it is 4.2e-9 in standard form.
negate ?context t is t negated, and rounded under context if necessary.
Opposite of negate; t's sign is left unchanged but t is rounded under context if necessary.
quantize ?context ?round ~exp t is t quantized so that its exponent is the same as that of exp.
round ?n t is t rounded to the nearest integer, or to a given precision. If n is None, round t to the nearest integer. If t lies exactly halfway between two integers then it is rounded to the even integer.
shift ?context t1 t2 shifts t1 by t2 decimal places, where t2 must be integral.
div_rem ?context t1 t2 is (t1 / t2, t1 mod t2).
fma ?context ~first_mul ~then_add t is fused multiply-add: t * first_mul + then_add with no rounding of the intermediate product.
t and first_mul are multiplied together, then then_add is added to the product, then a final rounding is performed.
scaleb ?context t1 t2 returns t1 after scaling its exponent by t2.